| Literature DB >> 30813576 |
Abstract
Research related with scaffold engineering tends to be cross-domain and miscellaneous. Several realms may need to be focused simultaneously, including biomedicine for cell culture and 3D scaffold, physics for dynamics, manufacturing for technologies like 3D printing, chemistry for material composition, as well as architecture for scaffold's geometric control. As a result, researchers with different backgrounds sometimes could have different understanding towards the product described as 'Scaffold'. After reviewing the literature, numerous studies termed their developed scaffold as 'novel', compared with scaffolds previously designed by others using comparing criterion like 'research time', 'manufacturing method', 'geometry', and so on. While it may have been convenient a decade ago to, for example, categorize scaffold with 'Dualistic Thinking' logic into 'simple-complicated' or 'traditional-novel', this method for categorizing 'novelty' and distinguishing scaffold is insufficiently persuasive and precise when it comes to modern or future scaffold. From this departure of philosophical language, namely the language of 'relativity', it is important to distinguish between different scaffolds. Other than attempting to avoid ambiguity in perceiving scaffold, this language also provides clarity regarding the 'evolution stage' where the focused scaffolds currently stand, where they have been developed, and where in future they could possibly evolve.Entities:
Keywords: 3D scaffold; 3DPVS; cell culture; dynamicity and dimensionality; evolution of scaffold; future scaffold engineering; language of relativity; laws of system evolution; novel scaffold; scaffold categorization; seven-folder logics; traditional scaffold; vibrating nature of universe.
Year: 2019 PMID: 30813576 PMCID: PMC6466242 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering6010020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Summarizing table of scaffold categorization via introducing the language of ’relativity’.
| Time Aspects | Previously Focused Cell Culture Scaffold | Bridging Scaffold | Short-Future Scaffold | Long-Future Scaffold | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categorization | Scaffold No. 1 | Scaffold No. 2 | Scaffold No. 3 | Scaffold No. 4 | Scaffold No. 5 | Scaffold No. 6 | Scaffold No. 7 |
| Dimensionality | 2D | 2.5D–3D | 3D | 3D | 3D | 3D or beyond | 3D or beyond |
| Dynamicity | Static, Passive | Static, Passive | Static, Passive | Partly Dynamic, Active | Finely dynamic, Vibratory, Active | Highly Dynamic, Vibratory, Active | Ideally Dynamic, Vibratory, Active |
| Chief Feature in brief | 2D plate or scaffold for 2D Cell Culture; very limited cell application; mostly replaced by scaffold No. 2 and 3; passive or static; stays at the bottom of scaffold’s evolutional ladder | 3D Scaffold in early stage, simple characterization and single function, static or passive | Current mainstream 3D scaffold being passive or static, with increasingly tailored Characterizations on geometrics and composition | Recent scaffold partly made or designed by smart or dynamic materials; Bridging scaffold No. 1, 2, 3 to No. 5; potentially dynamic or active; inevitable stage toward achieving scaffold No. 5 | 3D scaffold with fully integrated vibratory functions; tailored- or self-vibratory properties; 3DPVS as one typical d; currently under conceptual development stage | Bridging scaffold No. 5 to No. 7; remains as a concept; Multiple-dynamic functions integrated inside scaffold might appear; much sophisticated properties | Ideal Scaffold in self-perception; Fully, ideally controllable vibratility; probably close the gap between in vitro and vivo |
| Evolutional Ladder | Relatively Lowest | Low | Moderate | Slightly High | High | Very High | Relatively Highest |