Josh Spicer
Imagine a future in which a device that
connected to a computer could print a solid object. A future, in which, we can
have tangible goods as well as intangible services delivered to our desktops
and into our homes via the Internet. A future where the everyday
"atomization" of virtual objects into hard reality has turned the
mass pre-production and stock-holding of a wide range of goods and spare parts
into no more than an historical legacy. Such a future may sound like it is
being plucked from the worlds of Star Trek. However, transporter devices that
can instantaneously deliver us to remote locations may remain a fantasy, 3D
printers capable of outputting physical objects such as plates, clothing, and
even guns have been in both development and application for over three decades,
and are now starting to present a whole host of new digital manufacturing
capabilities. 3D printing may therefore soon do for manufacturing what
computers and the Internet have already done for the creation, processing and
storage of information.
The emerging process of 3-D printing, which uses
computer-created digital models to create real-world objects, has produced
everything from toys to jewelry to food.
Soon, however, 3-D printers may be spitting out something
far more complex, and controversial: human organs.
For years now, medical researchers have been reproducing
human cells in laboratories by hand to create blood vessels, urine tubes, skin
tissue and other living body parts. Engineering full organs, with their
complicated cell structures, is much more difficult. Enter 3-D printers, which
because of their precise process can reproduce the vascular systems required to
make such organs viable. Scientists are already using the machines to print
tiny strips of organ tissue. While printing whole human organs for surgical
transplants is still years away, the technology is rapidly developing. The idea
of printing a human kidney or liver in a lab may seem incomprehensible, even
creepy, but for many scientists in the field, bioprinting holds great promise.
Authentic printed organs could be used for drug or vaccine testing, freeing
researchers from less accurate methods such as tests on animals or on synthetic
models. There's the hope that 3-D printers could someday produce much-needed
organs for transplants. Americans are living longer, and as we get deeper into
old age our organs are failing more. Some 18 people die in the United States
each day waiting in vain for transplants because of a shortage of donated
organs. I found a video that explain 3-D human printing in much more detail and
it’s actually really interesting to watch.
Bioprinting works like this: Scientists harvest human cells
from biopsies or stem cells, then allow them to multiply in a petri dish. The
resulting mixture, a sort of biological ink, is fed into a 3-D printer, which
is programmed to arrange different cell types, along with other materials, into
a precise three-dimensional shape. Doctors hope that when placed in the body,
these 3-D-printed cells will integrate with existing tissues. The process
already is seeing some success. Last year a 2-year-old girl in Illinois, born
without a trachea, received a windpipe built with her own stem cells. The U.S.
government has funded a university-led "body on a chip" project that
prints tissue samples that mimic the functions of the heart, liver, lungs and
other organs. The samples are placed on a microchip and connected with a blood
substitute to keep the cells alive, allowing doctors to test specific
treatments and monitor their effectiveness. This is an exciting new area of
medicine. It has the potential for being a very important breakthrough.
However, there are some ethical concerns. What happens when
complex enhanced organs involving nonhuman cells are made? Who will control the
ability to produce them? Who will ensure the quality of the resulting
organs?" Bioprinted organs are also likely to be expensive, which could
put them out of reach of all but the wealthiest patients. Will only the rich be
able to afford it? Are we playing God? Despite all these concerns i think 3-D
printing is a huge step in the right direction and i cant wait to see what the
future holds.
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