Dr. Prashant Kumta and researchers at the Swanson School of Engineering and School of Dental Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh have developed a new 3D printed material for highly successful use in creating scaffoldings for the regeneration of biological tissue. Using an iron-manganese powder combination, they have created a viable synthetic 3D printed material that is corrosive and porous enough, as well as containing all the proper mechanical properties, to work as successful scaffolding in the rebuilding of tissue. They have so far created a goat mandible from a CT scan. The researchers are highly optimistic and will continue their research, working with animals first. For more details, check out the full article: http://3dprint.com/56463/iron-manganese-alloy-scaffold/


Below is a photo of bone cells attaching to 3D printed scaffolding: