To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. A research paper published in Science Translational ...
Caltech scientists have developed a method that detects tiny, imperceptible movements at the surface of objects to reveal details about what lies beneath. By analyzing the physics of waves traveling ...
For the first time, scientists have combined the six primary skin cell types with specialized hydrogels to ‘print’ a thick, multilayered skin that, when transplanted, successfully integrated with ...
The bioengineered creation has the full thickness of natural skin and was able to speed healing and reduce scarring in animal experiments. Reading time 2 minutes A team of scientists may have ...
Delayed full-thickness skin grafting after skin cancer resection was associated with a higher rate of graft success than immediate skin grafting.
Researchers at the University of Oregon, in tandem with French skin care company L’Oréal, have come up with a way to create a super-realistic equivalent of human skin. So far, they’re using it to test ...
WFIRM researchers use cells and hydrogels as bioinks to 3D print human skin. Credit: Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine WFIRM researchers use cells and hydrogels as bioinks to 3D print ...