Biofabrication for neural tissue engineering applications
L. Papadimitriou, P. Manganas, A. Ranella, E. Stratakis

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in biofabrication techniques for neural tissue engineering, focusing on scaffold development and lab-on-a-chip systems to repair nervous tissue and model neurological diseases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of current biofabrication methods, highlights limitations, and explores future directions in neural tissue engineering applications.
Findings
Development of various 3D scaffold fabrication techniques
Use of lab-on-a-chip systems for disease modeling
Identification of current limitations and future prospects
Abstract
Unlike other tissue types, the nervous tissue extends to a wide and complex environment that provides a plurality of different biochemical and topological stimuli which in turn define the functions of that tissue. As a consequence of such complexity, the traditional transplantation therapeutic methods are quite ineffective; therefore, the restoration of peripheral and central nervous system injuries has been a continuous challenge. Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine in the nervous system have provided new alternative medical approaches. These methods use external biomaterial supports, known as scaffolds, in order to create platforms for the cells to migrate to the injury site and repair the tissue. The challenge in neural tissue engineering (NTE) remains the fabrication of scaffolds with precisely controlled, tunable topography, biochemical cues and surface energy, capable of…
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