Carbon Dots-Mediated Fluorescent Scaffolds: Comparison
Please note this is a comparison between Version 1 by Dong-Wook Han and Version 2 by Conner Chen.

Regeneration of damaged tissues or organs is one of the significant challenges in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Many researchers have fabricated various scaffolds to accelerate the tissue regeneration process. However, most of the scaffolds are limited in clinical trials due to scaffold inconsistency, non-biodegradability, and lack of non-invasive techniques to monitor tissue regeneration after implantation. Recently, carbon dots (CDs) mediated fluorescent scaffolds are widely explored for the application of image-guided tissue engineering due to their controlled architecture, light-emitting ability, higher chemical and photostability, excellent biocompatibility, and biodegradability.

  • carbon dots
  • fluorescent scaffold
  • image-guided tissue engineering
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