
Microfluidics – Organ-on-chip
Author(s) -
Iulia Ioana Lungu,
Alexandru Mihai Grumezescu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biomedical engineering international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2668-6007
DOI - 10.33263/biomed11.002008
Subject(s) - organ on a chip , chip , microfluidic chip , organ system , microfluidics , computer science , lab on a chip , nanotechnology , medicine , pathology , materials science , telecommunications , disease
This review is an introduction into the world of organ-on-chip models. By briefly explaining the concept of microfluidics and ‘lab-on-chip’, the main focus is on organs-on-chip and body-on-a-chip. The usual method to test the toxicity of a drug is through animal testing. However, the results do not always correlate to humans. In order to avoid animal testing, but also attain useful results, human-derived cell cultures using microfluidics have gained attention. Among all the different types of organ-on-chip devices, this review focuses on three distinct organs: heart, skin and liver. The main requirements for each organ-on-chip, as well as recent researches are presented. There have been considerable advancements with organ-on-chip models; however, even these have their limitations. Due to the fact that the system mimics a single organ, the systemic effect of drugs cannot be fully tested. Therefore, body-on-a-chip systems have been developed; which basically are a composed of a single chip that has several chambers, each chamber accounting for a distinct organ. Multi-organ-on-chip systems have been investigated, and even commercialized, the field still being under extensive research.