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When a group of researchers didn’t have the budget to buy a 3D bioprinter — a highly specialized machine that prints living tissue — they decided to make their own.
They now steer a bioprinter startup called Foldink. Other bioprinters can cost as much as $200k, but Foldink wants to be a low-cost option.
The technology could help surgeons print skin grafts for burn victims or organs for transplant patients.
Dr. Frankenstein would have been insanely jealous of this tech — no spare body parts or alchemy necessary.
3D bioprinters use bio-ink, a substance made from live cell cultures, to make stackable, Lego-like units of tissue.
Currently, researchers are printing teeny-tiny lungs and colons to test COVID-19 drugs.
Tissue engineering is hot. The global market is expected to see a compound annual growth rate of ~14% annually, reaching ~$30B by 2027.