3D printed hair: a case for cautious optimism
The potential for 3D printing in medical and surgical environments is huge — but the procedures involved are complex [5]. Producing viable pieces of organic tissue for growing hair follicles is a lengthy process.
To do this, Poeitis created a digital map of the biological structure which can then instruct the printer to lay down tiny droplets of ‘biological ink.’ A laser is then used to create 10,000 micro-droplets of bio-ink per second to create the organic tissue.
The Columbia University team took a different approach. Instead of growing the hair itself, they used 3D printing to replicate the perfect growth environment for human hair. They placed hair follicles within this environment, and within 3 weeks, the follicles began to produce hair. Lead researcher Angela Christiano suggests this has the potential to create a “kind of hair farm — a network of hair that is properly designed and shaped so that it can be transplanted into the scalp of the same patient.”
As a result, patients who have previously been ineligible for hair transplants, due to excessive hair loss or overharvesting in previous transplant procedures, may become eligible for a procedure.