Emerging Techniques in Stratified Designs and Continuous Gradients for Tissue Engineering of Interfaces

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Issue Date
2010-04-22Author
Dormer, Nathan Henry
Berkland, Cory J.
Detamore, Michael S.
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
Rights
© Biomedical Engineering Society 2010
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Show full item recordAbstract
Interfacial tissue engineering is an emerging branch of regenerative medicine, where engineers are faced with developing methods for the repair of one or many functional tissue systems simultaneously. Early and recent solutions for complex tissue formation have utilized stratified designs, where scaffold formulations are segregated into two or more layers, with discrete changes in physical or chemical properties, mimicking a corresponding number of interfacing tissue types. This method has brought forth promising results, along with a myriad of regenerative techniques. The latest designs, however, are employing “continuous gradients” in properties, where there is no discrete segregation between scaffold layers. This review compares the methods and applications of recent stratified approaches to emerging continuously graded methods.
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Citation
Dormer, N. H., Berkland, C. J., & Detamore, M. S. (2010). Emerging Techniques in Stratified Designs and Continuous Gradients for Tissue Engineering of Interfaces. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 38(6), 2121–2141. http://doi.org/10.1007/s10439-010-0033-3
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