Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine

Image

Tissue engineering evolved from the field of biomaterials development and refers to the practice of combining scaffolds, cells, and biologically active molecules into functional tissues. The goal of tissue engineering is to assemble functional constructs that restore, maintain, or improve damaged tissues or whole organs. Artificial skin and cartilage are examples of engineered tissues that have been approved by the FDA; however, currently they have limited use in human patients. 

Regenerative medicine is a broad field that includes tissue engineering but also incorporates research on self-healing – where the body uses its own systems, sometimes with help foreign biological material to recreate cells and rebuild tissues and organs.  The terms “tissue engineering” and “regenerative medicine” have become largely interchangeable, as the field hopes to focus on cures instead of treatments for complex, often chronic, diseases.

This field continues to evolve. In addition to medical applications, non-therapeutic applications include using tissues as biosensors to detect biological or chemical threat agents, and tissue chips that can be used to test the toxicity of an experimental medication.

So do share your valuable research in our Journal of Biochemistry & Biotechnology  which is an open-access journal dedicating the research in the area of biochemistry & biotechnology. We have been publishing the articles which are having updated information on biological science.

Allied Academics is one of the leading publishers operates a journal portfolio focusing on biomedical, environment, finance and marketing subjects. The main aim is to publish Original, peer-reviewed articles, Review articles, Short Communication, Editorials, Case Reports etc., following internationally recognized standard editorial guidelines, publication ethics, and production policies. Several authors affiliated to reputed organizations, institutions, government bodies have published their valuable contributions with Allied Academies.

The manuscripts may be submitted as an attachment to biochembiotech[at]scholarlypub[dot]com; aabb[at]alliedjournals[dot]org  

Regards,
Nicola B
Editorial Team
Journal of  Biochemistry and Biotechnology