UofT 3D bio-printer creates skin grafts directly on wounds
By DE Staff
Additive Manufacturing MedicalResearchers say handheld printer can help repair multi-layer skin damage within minutes.
Designed in conjuction with Dr. Marc Jeschke, director of the Ross Tilley Burn Centre at Sunnybrook Hospital and professor of immunology at the Faculty of Medicine, the device operates similar to a tape dispenser. Bio-ink and cross-linking solutions are dispense by a multi-channeled micro-fluidic cartridge in a thin line across the wound. Rollers on either side of the cartridge maintain consistent layer thickness by coordinating fluid flow to roller speed. The bio-inks themselves combine dermal and epidermal cells plus alginate, a cross-linkable biomaterial and proteins like collagen and fibrin.
Weighing less than a kilogram, the handheld device requires minimal operator training, the researchers say, and eliminates the washing and incubation stages required by conventional bio-printers. Still in development, the printer is currently undergoing further in vivo studies at Sunnybrook Hospital but the researcher team plan to continue adding capabilities to the printer, including expanding the size of the coverable wound areas. They hope to begin clinical trials on humans, and eventually revolutionize burn care. The research was recently published in the journal Lab on a Chip.
www.engineering.utoronto.ca