A team from the Laboratory for Advanced Fabrication Technologies has developed the first swallowable #bioprinter, a device about the size of a pill that can be guided inside the body to repair damaged tissue. https://actu.epfl.ch/news/a-pill-that-prints-2/
A pill that prints

EPFL researchers have demonstrated the first pill-sized bioprinter that can be swallowed and guided within the gastrointestinal tract, where it directly deposits bio-ink over damaged tissues to support repair.

💊 A pill that prints: @EPFL researchers have demonstrated the first pill-sized #bioprinter that can be swallowed and guided within the gastrointestinal tract, where it directly deposits bio-ink over damaged tissues to support repair! Read more about this work, now published in Advanced Science: https://actu.epfl.ch/news/a-pill-that-prints/
A pill that prints

EPFL researchers have demonstrated the first pill-sized bioprinter that can be swallowed and guided within the gastrointestinal tract, where it directly deposits bio-ink over damaged tissues to support repair.

#OpenSLS update: Generation of model #tissues with #dendritic #vascular networks via sacrificial #laser-sintered #carbohydrate templates: https://rdcu.be/b5tHy

Hardware designs: https://github.com/MillerLabFTW/OpenSLS
-R4: specialty powders for biomaterials research
-R3: nylon & wax #SLS

-#Python add-on for #Blender to generate bifurcating vascular structures
#DIYbio #OpenSource #lab #3Dprinting #bioprinter #laser #hydrogel #instruments

SciTech Chronicles. . . . . . . . .Jan 30, 2025

  It is not the man who has too little, but the man who craves more, that is poor. Vol II No 25 380 links Curated researchers pinpointed a c...

Stereolithographische #Biodrucker sind für viele Forschungsgruppen zu teuer. Stefanie Sudhops Gruppe von der @tu_muenchen hat einfach ein billiges Einsteigermodell forschungstauglich umgemodelt … Andrea Pitzschke erklärt den "#Bioprinter für Sparfüchse": https://www.laborjournal.de/editorials/3046.php
Günstiger Bioprinter – Marke Eigenbau

ngstauglichen Biodrucker um ...

Laborjournal

#MOS3S: #Microfluidic-assisted #OpenSource #3Dbioprinting system for the engineering of hierarchical #tissues:

-#3dprinted parts
-#syringe #pumps
-fabrication of cm scale lattice constructs

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ohx.2024.e00527
#DIYbio #lab #instruments #hydrogel #bioprinter #tissue

Discussing The Tastier Side Of Desktop 3D Printing

Not long after the first desktop 3D printers were created, folks started wondering what other materials they could extrude. After all, plastic is only good for so much, and there’s plenty of …

Hackaday

3D Printing Toothpaste In the Name of Science

While we don't often see them in the hobbyist community, 3D printers that can extrude gels and viscous liquids have existed commercially for years, and are increasingly used for biological research. [Ahron Wayne] has recently been working with such a printer as part of a project to develop a printed wound dressing made of honey and blood clotting proteins, but for practice purposes, wanted to find a cheaper and more common material that had similar extrusion properties.

The material he settled on ended up being common toothpaste. In the video below you can see him loading up the cartridge of a CELLINK INKREDIBLE+ bioprinter with the minty goop, which is then extruded through a thin blunt-tip needle by compressed air. After printing out various shapes and words using the material, often times directly onto the bristles of a toothbrush, he's come up with a list of tips for printing similarly viscous substances.

First and foremost, go slow. [Ahron] says the material needs a moment to contract after being extruded if it's going to have any hope of supporting the next layer of the print. Thick layer heights are a necessity, as is avoiding sharp curves in your design. He also notes that overhangs must be avoided, and though it probably goes without saying, clarifies that an object printed from toothpaste will never be able to support anything more than its own weight.

In addition to the handful of legitimate DIY bioprinters that have graced these pages over the years, we've seen the occasional chocolate 3D printer that operated on a similar principle to produce bespoke treats, so the lessons learned by [Ahron] aren't completely lost on the hacker and maker crowd. Who knows? Perhaps you'll one day find yourself consulting this video when trying to get a modified 3D printer to lay down some soldering paste.

#3dprinterhacks #medicalhacks #bioprinter #extrusion #pasteextruder #toothpaste

3D Printing Toothpaste In The Name Of Science

While we don’t often see them in the hobbyist community, 3D printers that can extrude gels and viscous liquids have existed commercially for years, and are increasingly used for biological re…

Hackaday