Saturday, November 2, 2024
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Saturday, November 2, 2024 | Latest Paper

Martha Crago, Molly Shoichet, and Paul Davidson

Artist Amy Karle's 'Regenerative Reliquary,' a bioprinted scaffold in the shape of a human hand design 3D printed in an biodegradable pegda hydrogel that disintegrates over time. Canada is only now seeing the dramatic life-saving impacts of stem cells, yet that fundamental research has led to an entirely new approach to medicine and spawned a whole new sector in our economy. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Artist Amy Karle's 'Regenerative Reliquary,' a bioprinted scaffold in the shape of a human hand design 3D printed in an biodegradable pegda hydrogel that disintegrates over time. Canada is only now seeing the dramatic life-saving impacts of stem cells, yet that fundamental research has led to an entirely new approach to medicine and spawned a whole new sector in our economy. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Artist Amy Karle's 'Regenerative Reliquary,' a bioprinted scaffold in the shape of a human hand design 3D printed in an biodegradable pegda hydrogel that disintegrates over time. Canada is only now seeing the dramatic life-saving impacts of stem cells, yet that fundamental research has led to an entirely new approach to medicine and spawned a whole new sector in our economy. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
Artist Amy Karle's 'Regenerative Reliquary,' a bioprinted scaffold in the shape of a human hand design 3D printed in an biodegradable pegda hydrogel that disintegrates over time. Canada is only now seeing the dramatic life-saving impacts of stem cells, yet that fundamental research has led to an entirely new approach to medicine and spawned a whole new sector in our economy. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay