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The collaborative effort of researchers from a variety of institutes in Moscow has resulted in a paper published in the most recent issue of Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology

In this paper, titled “3D printing of octacalcium phosphate bone substitutes,” the researchers proposed a comparatively simple way in which octacalcium phosphates could be printed in complex shapes through a combination of inkjet printing and post-print finishing.

http://3dprint.com/68044/3d-printing-bone-research/