76 research outputs found

    High Throughput, Polymeric Aqueous Two‐Phase Printing of Tumor Spheroids

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109304/1/adfm201401302-sup-0001-S1.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/109304/2/adfm201401302.pd

    Biofabrication: an overview of the approaches used for printing of living cells

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    The development of cell printing is vital for establishing biofabrication approaches as clinically relevant tools. Achieving this requires bio-inks which must not only be easily printable, but also allow controllable and reproducible printing of cells. This review outlines the general principles and current progress and compares the advantages and challenges for the most widely used biofabrication techniques for printing cells: extrusion, laser, microvalve, inkjet and tissue fragment printing. It is expected that significant advances in cell printing will result from synergistic combinations of these techniques and lead to optimised resolution, throughput and the overall complexity of printed constructs

    A review of psychological impact of breast cancer in women below 50 years old

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    A breast cancer diagnosis is a critical event with a potentially traumatic nature. In recent years there has been an increase of this illness in women aged under-fifty, a group of particular scientific interest. In this article the authors review the recent scientific literature on psychological impact of breast cancer experiences in under-50 women. Our results highlight three trajectories: clinical psychological risks; feminine-specific concerns; resources between individual and relational aspects. This overview illustrates the complexity of the effects of breast cancer in under-50women allowing to think about theoretical and psychosocial models to provide support for under-50 women during the illness experience
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