Biomimetic Approaches to Engineer Materials for Medicine and Health Research


Avcı H.

11th ULPAS, Bursa, Türkiye, 4 - 05 Kasım 2022, ss.205-206

  • Yayın Türü: Bildiri / Özet Bildiri
  • Basıldığı Şehir: Bursa
  • Basıldığı Ülke: Türkiye
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.205-206
  • Eskişehir Osmangazi Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

Engineering items using bio-inspired ideas is not a new concept. The enthusiasm in forming and commercializing nature-inspired products, however, has only recently begun to pick up momentum as researchers start to understand the technical constraints and the endlessly basic, yet perfect, answers that have existed in natural mechanisms for billions of years. Since the beginning of the field several decades ago, current research inspired by biomimicry in regenerative medicine and health research holds much promise to restore or promote both structurally and functionally of damaged tissues and whole organs. Despite the fact that many strategies have been investigated to understand the mechanism and describe the status of this rapidly developing technology, historically, tissue engineering primarily have focused on providing relatively static scaffolding factors. On the other hands, increasing evidence suggests that the natural, dynamic three-dimensional micro-environment is important for directing cellular behavior. As a result, in order to better resemble the natural extracellular matrix (ECM), there has recently been a focus on making scaffolds more biocomplexity by adding adhesion, degradation, and three-dimensional features. There are many applications by inspiration of the nature in contrast to conventional techniques, which still have some restrictions on efficiency and various therapeutic substances. On the other hand, ‘organ on a chip’, a multi-channel 3D microfluidic in vitro cell-based devices, can be a very intriguing tool for researching medication delivery methods. On the other hand, multi-channel 3D microfluidic in vitro cell based systems referred to as ‘organ on a chip’ potentially represents a very interesting tool for studying not only drug development, and also tissue evolution, organ physiology and disease etiology. Biomimetics will unavoidably play an important role in biomedical and tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, and drug delivery systems, according to recent various studies on the biological systems by simulating the body's vascular perfusion, physicochemical microenvironments, tissue-tissue interactions, and multicellular architectures. Clinical applications of these future end-products, their monitoring, data collection points and timings with regulatory endorsement must be standardized, endorsed, and optimized for controllability and long-term usage. This requires developing a consensus at least between engineers, pharmacists, biologists and medical doctors.