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      Volumetric Additive Manufacturing for Cell Printing: Bridging Industry Adaptation and Regulatory Frontiers

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          Abstract

          Volumetric additive manufacturing (VAM) is revolutionizing the field of cell printing by enabling the rapid creation of complex three-dimensional cellular structures that mimic natural tissues. This paper explores the advantages and limitations of various VAM techniques, such as holographic lithography, digital light processing, and volumetric projection, while addressing their suitability across diverse industrial applications. Despite the significant potential of VAM, challenges related to regulatory compliance and scalability persist, particularly in the context of bioprinted tissues. In India, the lack of clear regulatory guidelines and intellectual property protections poses additional hurdles for companies seeking to navigate the evolving landscape of bioprinting. This study emphasizes the importance of collaboration among industry stakeholders, regulatory agencies, and academic institutions to establish tailored frameworks that promote innovation while ensuring safety and efficacy. By bridging the gap between technological advancement and regulatory oversight, VAM can unlock new opportunities in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering, transforming patient care and therapeutic outcomes.

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          Most cited references153

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          Designing hydrogels for controlled drug delivery

          Hydrogel delivery systems can leverage therapeutically beneficial outcomes of drug delivery and have found clinical use. Hydrogels can provide spatial and temporal control over the release of various therapeutic agents, including small-molecule drugs, macromolecular drugs and cells. Owing to their tunable physical properties, controllable degradability and capability to protect labile drugs from degradation, hydrogels serve as a platform in which various physiochemical interactions with the encapsulated drugs control their release. In this Review, we cover multiscale mechanisms underlying the design of hydrogel drug delivery systems, focusing on physical and chemical properties of the hydrogel network and the hydrogel-drug interactions across the network, mesh, and molecular (or atomistic) scales. We discuss how different mechanisms interact and can be integrated to exert fine control in time and space over the drug presentation. We also collect experimental release data from the literature, review clinical translation to date of these systems, and present quantitative comparisons between different systems to provide guidelines for the rational design of hydrogel delivery systems.
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            Chronic Wound Healing: A Review of Current Management and Treatments

            Wound healing is a complex, highly regulated process that is critical in maintaining the barrier function of skin. With numerous disease processes, the cascade of events involved in wound healing can be affected, resulting in chronic, non-healing wounds that subject the patient to significant discomfort and distress while draining the medical system of an enormous amount of resources. The healing of a superficial wound requires many factors to work in concert, and wound dressings and treatments have evolved considerably to address possible barriers to wound healing, ranging from infection to hypoxia. Even optimally, wound tissue never reaches its pre-injured strength and multiple aberrant healing states can result in chronic non-healing wounds. This article will review wound healing physiology and discuss current approaches for treating a wound.
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              Hydrogels as extracellular matrix mimics for 3D cell culture.

              Methods for culturing mammalian cells ex vivo are increasingly needed to study cell and tissue physiology and to grow replacement tissue for regenerative medicine. Two-dimensional culture has been the paradigm for typical in vitro cell culture; however, it has been demonstrated that cells behave more natively when cultured in three-dimensional environments. Permissive, synthetic hydrogels and promoting, natural hydrogels have become popular as three-dimensional cell culture platforms; yet, both of these systems possess limitations. In this perspective, we discuss the use of both synthetic and natural hydrogels as scaffolds for three-dimensional cell culture as well as synthetic hydrogels that incorporate sophisticated biochemical and mechanical cues as mimics of the native extracellular matrix. Ultimately, advances in synthetic-biologic hydrogel hybrids are needed to provide robust platforms for investigating cell physiology and fabricating tissue outside of the organism. (c) 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Biomater Sci Eng
                ACS Biomater Sci Eng
                ab
                abseba
                ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering
                American Chemical Society
                2373-9878
                02 January 2025
                13 January 2025
                : 11
                : 1
                : 156-181
                Affiliations
                []Manipal Centre for Biotherapeutics Research, Manipal Academy of Higher Education , Manipal, 576104 Karnataka, India
                []Department of Civil Engineering, Manipal Institute of Technology, Manipal Academy of Higher Education , Manipal, 576104 Karnataka, India
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5527-1375
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2115-153X
                Article
                10.1021/acsbiomaterials.4c01837
                11733917
                39746181
                78fdb1f0-f84a-4b0f-9bad-0b462673e5f8
                © 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 03 October 2024
                : 20 December 2024
                : 18 December 2024
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                ab4c01837
                ab4c01837

                volumetric additive manufacturing,light-based printing,tomography,additive manufacturing

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