The approach doesn’t require any suturing to deposit the printable gel that serves as the matrix within which new cells can proliferate and grow. The gel is naturally adhesive to wound tissue and stays stuck where it is placed. Because the approach doesn’t require modeling and printing of the scaffold outside the patient, it may allow for very quick deposition and rapid treatment of acute wounds.
So far the new gel and bioprinter combo have been tried in mice with volumetric muscle loss injuries and the material adhered to the nearby tissues and helped speed up skeletal muscle growth.
Study in ACS Applied Bio Materials: In Situ Printing of Adhesive Hydrogel Scaffolds for the Treatment of Skeletal Muscle Injuries
Via: UConn
Original Article: (https://www.medgadget.com/2020/02/device-prints-scaffolds-inside-wounds-to-replace-lost-tissue.html)