We are a factory that produces cold gel organs to help many medical students practice surgery, and we can also customize organs according to the actual situation of patients for doctors to practice before surgery. Very good!
It's been at least 12 years I've been hearing about scaffolding, 3d printing, ....stem cells, etc...., extracellular matrix....etc.... Where are the organs? The organs should be avail at most hospitals by now. It seems as if we are ALWAYS 5 years from it.
Sorry to say, but I am underwhelmed of the method. First you digitalize CT and MRI voxels into a 3d structure, but afterwards only print a 3d plastic model to use it for obtaining a silicon mold, that later is used during the surgery to fill it with a "Palacos" bone cement and implant this piece. Why don´t you 3d print a ceramic piece, that will be sintered in the oven and sterilise it prior to final use in the surgery ? The outcome would be better, smoother and with less fissures, cracks and potential microbial contaminations.
The worst is when she states that 3d printing actual organs is still years away. They can be printed right now in the microgravity of an orbiting manufacturing station.
@@ExtantFrodo2 We have ready access to orbiting microgravity stations? That's what she means... We are still years away. Maybe we should 3D print a brain for you.
Lol, kings college are wayyy behind. At 4:10 she says "hopefully one day we can bioprint an organ". With all due respect, stop teaching and become a student again because Mironov from Russia successfully 3d printed a throid and transplanted into mice many years ago now. Please don't stop learning just because you are a teacher.
For the love of all things holy, sacred, and medical, please stop calling this 3D printing. It is fabrication, and it's been around a lot longer than the kiddies equating it to real 3D printing. If you keep calling it 3D printing when it's really fabrication, then go back and start calling everything that was fabrication 3D printing. You can't have it both ways.
you're kidding right? how are you so jaded and dull that an amazing field of science is uninteresting? can you even fathom what this means in the coming years? probably not who am I kidding lol.
We are a factory that produces cold gel organs to help many medical students practice surgery, and we can also customize organs according to the actual situation of patients for doctors to practice before surgery. Very good!
Please, more detailed presentation on this. Regardless of the cost!!
Fascinating research!!!!!
Excellent explanation on a very interesting topic of huge importance.
Hey ,
Royal institution
Please upload full video please ²
This is amazing
lovely talk 🗣️
Thanks, really interesting
It's been at least 12 years I've been hearing about scaffolding, 3d printing, ....stem cells, etc...., extracellular matrix....etc.... Where are the organs? The organs should be avail at most hospitals by now.
It seems as if we are ALWAYS 5 years from it.
The warning about the image of an open chest being unsafe to view during a medical presentation is ridiculous.
I appreciate it, because I can’t stand seeing stuff like that.
Hello Earthlings 🖖
You are not an actual alien
@@2CSST2 your an actual Earthling
Sorry to say, but I am underwhelmed of the method. First you digitalize CT and MRI voxels into a 3d structure, but afterwards only print a 3d plastic model to use it for obtaining a silicon mold, that later is used during the surgery to fill it with a "Palacos" bone cement and implant this piece. Why don´t you 3d print a ceramic piece, that will be sintered in the oven and sterilise it prior to final use in the surgery ? The outcome would be better, smoother and with less fissures, cracks and potential microbial contaminations.
The worst is when she states that 3d printing actual organs is still years away. They can be printed right now in the microgravity of an orbiting manufacturing station.
@@ExtantFrodo2 We have ready access to orbiting microgravity stations? That's what she means... We are still years away. Maybe we should 3D print a brain for you.
Lol, kings college are wayyy behind. At 4:10 she says "hopefully one day we can bioprint an organ". With all due respect, stop teaching and become a student again because Mironov from Russia successfully 3d printed a throid and transplanted into mice many years ago now. Please don't stop learning just because you are a teacher.
Wow this was soooo underwhelming!!!
The current state of "clinical" 3D printing and it's applications are wayyyy ahead of what was presented.
There will be a period when such artificial organs are kind of functional but not as good as real ones from healthy people. Guess what will happen?
People will get those things to tide them over until they can make better ones?
Another elizabeth Holmes Watson , over promised hyperloop
She is so beautiful
How about first doing a proper steak (and not some indescribable paste) that I can eat and after that we might think about real living organs!
Go watch cooking shows instead of science if this is the kind of reaction you write
Interesting indeed, if not slightly condescending in its delivery...
For the love of all things holy, sacred, and medical, please stop calling this 3D printing. It is fabrication, and it's been around a lot longer than the kiddies equating it to real 3D printing.
If you keep calling it 3D printing when it's really fabrication, then go back and start calling everything that was fabrication 3D printing. You can't have it both ways.
Additive manufacturing via selective material deposition.
Err did you miss the part where she uses a 3d printer or are you just doing some weird gatekeeping thing to declare it's not a "Real" 3d printer?
I am a first 😅
You happy now?
All about money, DISGRACEFUL!
Tell us how it's all about money …
@@dubiousName How much does a heart cost?
@@dubiousName How much does a doctor cost?
@@dubiousName How much does a surgeon cost?
@@dubiousName How much do the rights to the patents for using these technologies cost?
Not really interesting
Like you
you're kidding right? how are you so jaded and dull that an amazing field of science is uninteresting? can you even fathom what this means in the coming years? probably not who am I kidding lol.