Bioresorbable Polymers: Advanced Materials and 4D Printing for Tissue Engineering.

Polymers (Basel)

M3 Health Industria e Comercio de Produtos Medicos, Odontologicos e Correlatos S.A., Jundiaí, Sao Paulo 13212-213, Brazil.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Three-dimensional (3D) printing is great for creating complex structures for tissue engineering, but these structures are static and don't change shape like natural tissues do.
  • Four-dimensional (4D) printing uses smart, stimuli-responsive materials to enable dynamic changes in printed structures, allowing engineered tissues to adapt in a controlled way.
  • This review focuses on advanced bioresorbable polymers for 4D printing, highlighting their potential in creating biocompatible environments that mimic extracellular matrices for tissue engineering.

Article Abstract

Three-dimensional (3D) printing is a valuable tool in the production of complexes structures with specific shapes for tissue engineering. Differently from native tissues, the printed structures are static and do not transform their shape in response to different environment changes. Stimuli-responsive biocompatible materials have emerged in the biomedical field due to the ability of responding to other stimuli (physical, chemical, and/or biological), resulting in microstructures modifications. Four-dimensional (4D) printing arises as a new technology that implements dynamic improvements in printed structures using smart materials (stimuli-responsive materials) and/or cells. These dynamic scaffolds enable engineered tissues to undergo morphological changes in a pre-planned way. Stimuli-responsive polymeric hydrogels are the most promising material for 4D bio-fabrication because they produce a biocompatible and bioresorbable 3D shape environment similar to the extracellular matrix and allow deposition of cells on the scaffold surface as well as in the inside. Subsequently, this review presents different bioresorbable advanced polymers and discusses its use in 4D printing for tissue engineering applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7918883PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym13040563DOI Listing

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