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Biomaterials Biocompatibility


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Last updated 8/2020
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 357.16 MB | Duration: 1h 14m

Biocompatibility​

What you'll learn
Definition of biocompatibility and biomaterials
Study of biocompatibility from the point of view of toxicity, allergenicity, effect on genes and blood, carcinogenicity and biodegradability
Introduction of biocompatibility standards
The interaction of cells with biomaterials
Physicochemical properties of biomaterials and their biocompatibility
Compatibility blood and the factors affecting it
The process of wound healing in the presence of natural and artificial biomaterials
Requirements
System requirements: PC, laptop or mobile device (with Udemy app) and broadband connectivity.
Course requirements: There are no pre-requisite or other course requirements.
Description
Biocompatibility means the adaptation of biomaterial to biological conditions and the absence of harmful toxic effects. Scaffold biocompatibility means the ability to regenerate tissue with the body without producing harmful systemic and local responses in the host. Interaction between body and biomaterials will have a significant effect on biomaterial Function. There is a great deal of interaction between the body and the biomaterial. There are three basic characteristics of this definition: first, that biomaterial must work, second, that the best response from the body's tissues to biomaterial is necessary, and third, that biocompatibility must always be defined for a specific application. Biomaterial biocompatibility is its ability to create optimal performance in the host with an acceptable surface of connective tissue binding without creating adverse local systemic responses. The biocompatibility of scaffolding is defined as the ability of the structure to support appropriate cellular activities to optimize...

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