About this Research Topic
Tailoring biomaterial properties for such a plethora of applications is a challenge that requires a merging of knowledge across chemistry, pharmacy, biology, physics and engineering.
Clinical applications often involve opposing requirements in terms of FBMs' lifetimes. In some cases, the FBMs should be stable and efficiently interact with the biological environment for many years after implantation, while in others they may need to be safely biodegraded or gradually bio-absorbed once their restorative or delivery functions have been accomplished. Sometimes a combination of the two approaches is desirable.
The scope of this Research Topic covers the design and synthesis of FBMs alone or integrated on implantable devices and their biomedical applications, with a focus on the specific properties they must possess for their successful translation in specific clinical applications for acute therapy/diagnosis or chronic treatment.
The Research Topic is open to both original research and perspective papers, as well as review articles. Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:
• Biomaterials and bio-devices for drug delivery/delivery systems
• Biomaterials for cancer diagnosis and therapy
• Biomaterials and bio-devices for neuroprosthetics
• Biomaterials for imaging: clinical diagnostic and research tools
• Biosensor and bioelectronics
• Tissue Engineering Scaffolds
• Nanoparticle-based therapy and sensing
• Toxicology and risk assessment of materials used in biological interfaces
Keywords: Biomaterials, Interfaces, Biodegradability, Biomedical Application, Implantable Devices
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.