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Ex Machina
Ex Machina© Provided by Giant Freakin Robot

And just like that, we're living in the future. Over the last decade, scientists have been figuring out how to print all kinds of things, from printed art to prosthetics to food to braces, and it seems there's a printing solution for any need. And maybe there is because researchers at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine have just figured out how to make bioprinted skin, which will end up being a game changer for healing severe wounds like burns and deep lacerations. 

Bioprinted skin made from human cells is a reality and will change healthcare forever.

According to Interesting Engineering, scientists have created bioprinted skin that's not just skin-deep but functions remarkably like the real deal. They've already tested the bioengineered skin on pigs with severe wounds and will soon be experimenting on people with the hope that this printed skin will heal wounds, burns, and various other skin injuries.

The bioprinted skin is a remarkable achievement as it replicates all three essential layers of real human skin: the hypodermis, epidermis, and dermis. While testing the bioengineered skin on pigs, researchers confirmed that the grafts generated improved wound closure and significant skin regeneration even on full-thickness wounds.

The scientists confirmed in the study, which was published in Science Translational Medicine, that the experiment showcased progress in bioprinted skin research, enhancing "the regeneration and production of native-like skin and suggests that bioprinted skin may be applicable for human clinical use." This breakthrough holds immense promise for the medical field and could address a pressing need.

The bioprinted skin is a remarkable achievement as it replicates all three essential layers of real human skin: the hypodermis, epidermis, and dermis.

The need for bioprinted skin arises from the considerable challenges associated with treating full-thickness wounds caused by severe injuries or burns. In the United States alone, nearly half a million people require treatment for such wounds annually, incurring a staggering cost of $2 billion.

Traditionally, doctors have relied on autologous skin grafting to treat these wounds, a procedure that involves transplanting healthy skin from one part of a patient's body to the damaged area. While this method has proven effective for many patients, it does have limitations, mainly in burn victims who may not have enough skin to harvest for the grafts. Bioprinted skin can fix this problem, as all doctors would need is a few cells in order to engineer a bioprinted skin graft for the patient.

 

 
 

Ex Machina
Ex Machina© Provided by Giant Freakin Robot

 

 

And just like that, we're living in the future. Over the last decade, scientists have been figuring out how to print all kinds of things, from printed art to prosthetics to food to braces, and it seems there's a printing solution for any need. And maybe there is because researchers at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine have just figured out how to make bioprinted skin, which will end up being a game changer for healing severe wounds like burns and deep lacerations. 

Bioprinted skin made from human cells is a reality and will change healthcare forever.

According to Interesting Engineering, scientists have created bioprinted skin that's not just skin-deep but functions remarkably like the real deal. They've already tested the bioengineered skin on pigs with severe wounds and will soon be experimenting on people with the hope that this printed skin will heal wounds, burns, and various other skin injuries.

The bioprinted skin is a remarkable achievement as it replicates all three essential layers of real human skin: the hypodermis, epidermis, and dermis. While testing the bioengineered skin on pigs, researchers confirmed that the grafts generated improved wound closure and significant skin regeneration even on full-thickness wounds.

The scientists confirmed in the study, which was published in Science Translational Medicine, that the experiment showcased progress in bioprinted skin research, enhancing "the regeneration and production of native-like skin and suggests that bioprinted skin may be applicable for human clinical use." This breakthrough holds immense promise for the medical field and could address a pressing need.

The bioprinted skin is a remarkable achievement as it replicates all three essential layers of real human skin: the hypodermis, epidermis, and dermis.

The need for bioprinted skin arises from the considerable challenges associated with treating full-thickness wounds caused by severe injuries or burns. In the United States alone, nearly half a million people require treatment for such wounds annually, incurring a staggering cost of $2 billion.

Traditionally, doctors have relied on autologous skin grafting to treat these wounds, a procedure that involves transplanting healthy skin from one part of a patient's body to the damaged area. While this method has proven effective for many patients, it does have limitations, mainly in burn victims who may not have enough skin to harvest for the grafts. Bioprinted skin can fix this problem, as all doctors would need is a few cells in order to engineer a bioprinted skin graft for the patient.

 

Japan's new LOVE ROBOT

Scarlett to Integrate with Chat GPT

You have heard about ChatGPT…

It's the AI platform that has taken the world by storm this year.

And Ambari aims to use this "superhuman" technology in its Scarlett application.

After all, customers always prefer a "conversation" with their adviser to filling out forms…

Integrating ChatGPT with "Scarlett" will enhance the app's capabilities and provide a conversational interface for users.

Here's how it could work:

  1. ChatGPT would integrate with Scarlett for virtual beauty consultations, personalized skin care recommendations, makeup tutorials, or to answer general beauty-related questions.
  2. ChatGPT would be seamlessly embedded within Scarlett through a combination of a chatbot-like interface and a voice-based assistant. Customers will not even be aware that there is a next-generation AI powering the conversation. It would feel natural and effortless.
  3. Scarlet aims to communicate with the ChatGPT model through an API or data integration to send user queries to the ChatGPT model and receive responses.
  4. Scarlet aims to utilize ChatGPT to understand user queries related to beauty and cosmetics presented in natural language. ChatGPT has developed and is leveraging existing natural language understanding (NLU) capabilities to extract relevant information from user inputs. This preprocessing step helps frame the context of the user's request and ensures the chatbot provides accurate and helpful responses.
  5. Scarlet aims to fine-tune ChatGPT specifically for beauty-related conversations to improve its understanding and generate more relevant responses.
  6. Scarlet will regularly update and improve itself by retraining or fine-tuning based on user feedback and evolving user needs.

The last point is critical…

AI models such as ChatGPT are constantly self-improving.

As we said earlier, Scarlett plans to use ChatGPT. And that already would put it ahead of the competition in the beauty industry.

The company's combination of retail presence, "beauty booths" that it aims to install at some of the most premium locations in North America and Europe… and the self-improving algorithm that will constantly fine-tune itself to increase customer satisfaction and repeat purchases…

We have never seen anything like this before. We urge you to visit Ambari.ai to learn more.

Ambari Brands Inc. (OTC:AMBBF, CSE:AMB) is a truly unique business.

You can't afford to miss it.

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