Health
New 3D printing technique could make lab-grown organs more practical – Yahoo News Australia
A fast 3D printing technique could lead to healthy lab-grown organs that are ready in minutes rather than hours.
As much as 3D-printed organs have advanced, creating them is still a slow process that can damage the tissue. There may soon be a quicker and more effective method, however. Researchers from the University at Buffalo and elsewhere have developed a 3D printing technique that’s 10 to 50 times faster than standard methods. A tiny synthetic hand (shown above) that would have taken six hours to print took just 19 minutes enough to minimize the deformation and cellular damage from earlier systems.
The…
-
Noosa News14 hours agoTwo teenagers and two adults rushed to hospital in life-threatening conditions after shocking Lawnton house fire
-
Noosa News14 hours agoFatal traffic crash, Noosa – Sunshine Coast
-
Noosa News15 hours agoA secret scheme and plans to expel former leaders — here’s what we’ve heard from Queensland’s inquiry into the CFMEU
-
Business14 hours agoTop brokers name 3 ASX shares to buy next week 23 November 2025
