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Great work Sandra! your manuscript has been just published in Polymers

First publication date: 22/06/2022

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What a great piece of work just published in Polymers (IF: 4.329) by Sandra Gracia-Rey and collaborators. This is a perfect example of the possitive collaboration between our research group at UPV/EHU and the groups from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering from Brigham Young University, Provo, USA. 

This is part of the DNASurf project funded by the EU.

Abstract: Additive manufacturing technology is an emerging method for rapid prototyping, which enables the creation of complex geometries by one-step fabrication processes through a layer-by-layer approach. The simplified fabrication achieved with this methodology opens the way towards a more efficient industrial production, with applications in a great number of fields such as biomedical devices. In biomedicine, blood is the gold-standard biofluid for clinical analysis. However, blood cells generate analytical interferences in many test procedures; hence, it is important to separate plasma from blood cells before analytical testing of blood samples. In this research, a custom-made resin formulation combined with a high-resolution 3D printing methodology were used to achieve a methodology for the fast prototype optimization of an operative plasma separation modular device. Through an iterative process, 17 different prototypes were designed and fabricated with printing times ranging from 5 to 12 min. The final device was evaluated through colorimetric analysis, validating this fabrication approach for the qualitative assessment of plasma separation from whole blood. The 3D printing method used here demonstrates the great contribution that this microfluidic technology will bring to the plasma separation biomedical devices market.