Biotextile

Biotextiles are specialized materials engineered from natural or synthetic fibers. These textiles are designed to interact with biological systems, offering properties such as biocompatibility, porosity, and mechanical strength or are designed to be environmentally friendly for typical household applications. There are several uses for biotextiles since they are a broad category. The most common uses are for medical or household use. However, this term may also refer to textiles constructed from biological waste product. These biotextiles are not typically used for industrial purposes.

The term "biotextiles" derives from the combination of "bio," referring to biology or living organisms, and "textiles," indicating woven or fibrous materials. It encompasses the interdisciplinary field of biomedical textiles, which focuses on the design, fabrication, and application of textile materials in healthcare and biomedical engineering. Biotextiles made from mycelium, vegetable biomass, bacterial cellulose, and recombinant protein based fibers are used as an alternative to synthetic textiles to prevent and reduce the high greenhouse gas emissions, water pollution, and landfill waste from the textile industry.[1] Biotextiles are also used within healthcare and the biomedical engineering field as implantable devices such as surgical sutures, hernia repair fabrics, arterial grafts, artificial skin and parts of artificial hearts.[2]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference :2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "Medical Textiles No Longer for 'External Use Only'". medicalxpress.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.

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