The recent revolution in the biological sciences and bioengineering,
along with the advancements of modern design and manufacturing,
biomaterials, biology, and biomedicine, have brought about the new field
of computer-aided tissue engineering. Advances in this fascinating new
area of study encompass broad applications in large-scale tissue
engineering fabrication, artificial organs, orthopaedic implants, and
biological chips. Computer-Aided Tissue Engineering highlights the
interdisciplinary nature of this topic and reviews the current state of
computer-aided three-dimensional tissue modeling, tissue classification,
and tissue fabrication and implantation. Particular focus is placed on
rapid prototyping and direct digital fabrication for cell and organs,
construction of tissue analogs, and precursors to 3D tissue scaffolds.
Written for the highly successful Methods in Molecular Biology(TM)
series, this work provides the kind of detailed description and
implementation advice that is crucial for getting optimal results.
Current and practical, Computer-Aided Tissue Engineering provides a
coherent framework for researchers interested in these vital
technologies and for clinicians who plan to implement them.