Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients

This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2021.

Bibliografiske detaljer
Main Authors: Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur, Noor, Mayesha
Andre forfattere: Naser, Iftekhar Bin
Format: Thesis
Sprog:en_US
Udgivet: BRAC University 2021
Fag:
Online adgang:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15046
id 10361-15046
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-150462021-09-23T21:01:28Z Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur Noor, Mayesha Naser, Iftekhar Bin Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Brac University Bioprinting Tissue engineering Regenerative medicine Organ transplantation COVID-19 Animal tissue culture This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2021. Catalogued from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 19-25). Ever since its first case detected in December 2019 in Wuhan, the Covid-19 infection caused by the SARS-CoV-2 strain of the coronavirus, it has gone on to affect a total of 71,516,809 (last recorded on 12th December,2020) people all over the world. This resulted in the biggest pandemic since 1920 and caused over 16,03,054 deaths at a rate of approximately 3%. One of the vital ORGANS of attack for the virus in humans is the lungs which is involved in arguably the most important function of the human body, respiration. Study showed that around 90% of the lungs get infected by the virus. While, majority of the population below the age group of 50 were successful in fighting off the infection, the virus tends to leave a lasting effect that leads to detrimental effects. The purpose of this research is to integrate tissue engineering and bioprinting and look at Bioprinted lungs through transplantation as a viable alternative to treat lung infections. Furthermore, it underlines the functioning of the lungs and the parts which can be engineered to create artificial lungs, in order to initiate a successful transplantation. To add with it, the motive of this study is also to compare how a Bioprinted organ transplantation is much viable and provides less health complications than a normal transplantation. MD Tawsif Ur Rashid Mayesha Noor B. Biotechnology 2021-09-23T06:57:47Z 2021-09-23T06:57:47Z 2021 2021-02 Thesis ID: 17136006 ID: 17136036 http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15046 en_US Brac University theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. 25 Pages application/pdf BRAC University
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language en_US
topic Bioprinting
Tissue engineering
Regenerative medicine
Organ transplantation
COVID-19
Animal tissue culture
spellingShingle Bioprinting
Tissue engineering
Regenerative medicine
Organ transplantation
COVID-19
Animal tissue culture
Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur
Noor, Mayesha
Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
description This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2021.
author2 Naser, Iftekhar Bin
author_facet Naser, Iftekhar Bin
Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur
Noor, Mayesha
format Thesis
author Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur
Noor, Mayesha
author_sort Rashid, MD Tawsif Ur
title Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
title_short Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
title_full Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
title_fullStr Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
title_full_unstemmed Prospect of bioprinted lungs for COVID-19 recovered patients
title_sort prospect of bioprinted lungs for covid-19 recovered patients
publisher BRAC University
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15046
work_keys_str_mv AT rashidmdtawsifur prospectofbioprintedlungsforcovid19recoveredpatients
AT noormayesha prospectofbioprintedlungsforcovid19recoveredpatients
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