Check out the latest covers of Advanced Healthcare Materials!
Check out the latest covers of Advanced Healthcare Materials!
A team of researchers construct spider-silk-based “Protein Bricks” with on-demand shape and function for biomedical applications.
Clinically approved hydrogels can be structured across multiple length scales to generate materials with a variety of new physical properties.
A team of North American researchers demonstrated a label-free and more direct way to observe and quantify microvascular and metabolic healing mechanisms, and the biological response to a topical treatment, utilizing a multimodal microscope equipped with OCT and FLIM.
Precision micromanufacturing of electrospun microfibers can create 3D scaffold structures which support the growth of tessellated microtissues.
A new international journal covering innovations in the science & engineering that underlie medical devices and medical sensors now accepting submissions.
This Special Issue is a collection of seven review articles that summarize the most recent resveratrol and pterostibene research.
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Latest Advanced Healthcare Materials covers.
Researchers from Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan, report a method to fabricate hydrogels with hierarchical fibrous structures that mimic tendons and ligaments.