[ Back ]   [ More News ]   [ Home ]
3D Printing for Healthcare: R&D, Industry and Market 2015-2025

LONDON, February 18, 2015 — (PRNewswire) —

Report Details  

Three dimensional printing for medical applications - how to find trends, technologies and sales potentials
What's the future of additive manufacturing for medicine? That's fabricating three dimensional solid objects from digital models, via 3D printers. Visiongain's new report gives data and analysis, letting you explore developments, technology and revenue predictions.

That analysis forecasts revenues there to 2025 at overall world market, submarket and national level. Avoid falling behind in knowledge, missing business or losing influence.

Explore, then, the commercial prospects of those computer controlled industrial robots for performing additive processes. See outlooks for medical devices, tissues, drugs and more.

Advances in manufacturing for medicine - find what that printer technology could be worth
So find potentials for those novel production tools for creating shapes and patterns - multiform designs. You explore that medical business. Now discover how you could gain.

So please read on to explore those technologies, applications and products, seeing what their future market could be worth.

Forecasts to 2025 and other information to help you stay ahead in knowledge
Besides revenue forecasting to 2025, our new work shows you historical data, recent results, growth rates and market shares. There you explore research and development (R&D) too. You also get 57 tables, 53 charts and seven interviews with people in that field.

To see a report overview please email Sara Peerun on Email Contact

Information to help your work and save time, benefiting your authority
Is finding data on novel prototyping and production systems for health a challenge? Now make your work easier. And save time. That way you can stay ahead in knowledge, helping your research, analyses and decisions. Also benefit your influence.

Our study lets you investigate the most promising and lucrative aspects of that producing. There you assess methods, equipment and their uses, hearing what's going on and seeing where money lies. Try our new report, then, gaining feel for the 3D printing sector's potential.

And the following sections outline what you get in that new investigation.

Forecasting of that world market and its main segments - what's likely to happen?
What're the secrets of that industry's progress? What's the potential of that chemistry and engineering for medicine? Discover in our report overall world revenue to 2025 for those synthetic processes for medical applications.

Also find individual revenue predictions to 2025 for six submarkets at world level:
• Products - with sub-forecasts for dental products, medical implants, bio-printed tissue and other uses
• Technology.

Which operations and processes will generate most money from 2015? There you assess outlooks for commercial growth, seeing where you can gain.

Our analysis helps you identify potential in that synthesis for medicine, producing complex geometries and surfaces. Explore the best revenue-generating prospects.

And that emerging industry holds opportunity in developed and developing countries.

National markets - where will highest revenues and business expansion occur?
Needs for medical devices, diagnostics and pharmaceuticals expand use of manufacturing technologies using 3D print methods. In our study you examine the technological and commercial scope of those developments, also exploring national opportunities.

Those analyses show you individual revenue forecasts to 2025 for 11 countries:
United States (US)
Japan
Germany, France, UK, Italy and Spain (EU5)
Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC nations).

There you find regions with highest revenues, demand and sales potentials for that production. Our work explains for those systems and their uses. You find international prospects, appraising needs and demands.

So explore how technology for multidimensional printing can benefit its developers, producers, marketers, sellers and users. Our work shows you, discussing crucial issues.

Events and forces for developing, producing, marketing and selling
The report explains forces affecting that industry and market from 2015, including these:
• Technologies including selective laser sintering (SLS), direct metal laser sintering (DMLS), electron beam melting (EBM), stereolithography (SLA) and bioprinting
• Orthopaedic and cranio-maxillofacial implants, medical modelling, prototypes and pharmaceuticals
• Regulatory requirements - abridged pathways, innovations and challenges with 3D technologies
• Intervertebral discs, bionic organs, bioengineering, skin grafts, implantable cartilage, artificial blood vessels, liver tissue, heart valves and reconstructive surgery
• Other advances in research and development, inc. efforts to improve biocompatibility and enhance functionality.

There you explore political, economic, social and technological questions, investigating outlooks for business. Examine what stimulates and restrains that industry and market.

See what success is possible.

To see a report overview please email Sara Peerun on Email Contact

Companies and overall 2019 market value - how high can 3D shaping revenues go?
What does the future hold? Our report predicts the world market for those multidimensional printer technologies for health will generate $2,879m in 2019, with further multiplication of overall value to 2025.

There, corporations and specialty providers of that chemical and engineering technology can prosper. You discover how and why.

Explore activities, progress and outlooks of these organisations, among others:
• Stratasys
• 3D Systems
• Tissue Regeneration Systems
• Oxford Performance Materials
• Within Technologies
• Tronrud Engineering
• Alphaform
• Arcam.

You find 137 organisations mentioned. Also you read seven interviews with authorities in the field. So find what participants do, say and think, helping you stay ahead.

Ways 3D Printing for Healthcare: R&D, Industry and Market 2015-2025 helps
Through analyses such as these, our new study helps your work:
• Revenues to 2025 at world level and for 6 submarkets - see outlooks for that emerging industry, its technology, marketing and sales
• Forecasts to 2025 for 11 national markets in the Americas, Europe and Asia - investigate leading countries for potential revenues and commercial expansion
• Prospects for companies and other organisations - assess technology portfolios, progress, business strategies and developmental activities
• Discussions of R&D - explore progress in that industry, finding technological, clinical and commercial outlooks and opportunities
• Analysis of what stimulates and restrains that market - assess challenges and strengths, helping you compete and gain advantages
• Interviews with 7 authorities in that field - discover views to help you stay ahead.

Knowledge found nowhere else, helping your searches, analyses and plans
Our report gives independent analysis. There you receive competitive intelligence found only in our work, finding where progress and money lie. Explore possibilities for business.

With that information you're less likely to fall behind in knowledge or miss opportunity. There find how you could save time and effort, helping your decisions and influence.

Trying our investigation now lets you explore 3D printing opportunities and predictions
Our new study is for everyone investigating production techniques, equipment and devices for healthcare. In it you find revenue forecasting to 2025, with opinions and discussions. So avoid missing out - please get that report here now.

To request an exec summary of this report please email Sara Peerun at Email Contact or call Tel: +44(0)20-7336-6100

Or click on https://www.visiongain.com/Report/1386/3D-Printing-for-Healthcare-R-D-Industry-and-Market-2015-2025

Companies Listed On This Report 

3D Systems
3T RPD
4WEB Medical
5N Plus
Adler Ortho
Alphaform AG
AP&C
Aprecia Pharmaceuticals
Arcam AB
Asian Manufacturing Association
Autodesk
BestinClass SA
Bio 3D Technologies
Biomet
Bionics Institute
C&A Tool
Canon
Chinese Food and Drug Administration
Clemson University
Compass3D
Cornell University
CPA Group
CTI Renato Archer
Dante Pazzanese Cardiology Institute
DePuy Synthes
Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin
DiSanto Technology
EnvisionTEC
EOS
Epson
ETH Zurich
European Commission
European Medicines Agency
FirstSurface Ltd
Food and Drug Administration
Formlabs
Fraunhofer Institutes
Fripp Design and Research
Geomagic
GrabCAD
Hangzhou Dianzi University
Harvard University
Harvest Technologies
Herriot-Watt University
Hewlett-Packard
Imaginarium
Industry Alliance of China 3D Printing Technology
Interfacial Solutions
inVentiv Health
Invetech
Janssen Research and Development
Johns Hopkins University
Johnson & Johnson
Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine
Laser Zentrum Hannover
LayerWise
Lima Corporate
Maastricht Instruments B.V.
MakerBot
Manchester Metropolitan University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Materialise NV
Mattel Children's Hospital
MCP HEK Tooling
Medical Modeling Inc.
Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency
Medtronic
Ministry of Industry and Information technology
Mobelife
Nakashima Medical
Nano 3D Biosciences
National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute
National Institute of Health
National Network for Manufacturing Innovation
North Carolina State University
OBL
Organovo
Osteopore International
Oxford Performance Materials
Paramount Industries
Peking University 3rd Hospital
Pfizer
Princeton University
Protosys Technologies
Queen's Medical Centre
QuinXell Technologies
Rainbow BioSciences
Rainbow Coral Corp.
RedEye
RegenHU
Renishaw
Replica 3dm
Riton Biomaterial Co. Ltd
Roche
Roslin Cellab
Royal Perth Hospital
Salisbury District Hospital
Simbionix
Sixense
SkinPrint
Smith & Nephew
Solid Concepts
Sony DADC
Stratasys
Stryker
Technology Strategy Board
TeVido Biodevices
The Cronin Group
The Knight Cancer Institute of Oregon Health and Science University
The Michael J Fox Foundation
Tissue Regeneration Systems
Tronrud
TU Berlin
UCLA
United Therapeutics
University of Central Lancashire
University of Glasgow
University of Iowa
University of Michigan
University of North Carolina
University of Nottingham
University of Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh
University of Sheffield
University of Wisconsin
US Army
Vidar Systems Corp.
VIVOS Dental
Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM)
Walter Reed National Military Medical Centre
Weill Cornell Medical College
Wellcome Trust
Within Technologies
World Health Organisation (WHO)
Wyss Institute for Regenerative Medicine
Xilloc Medical
Zimmer

To see a report overview please email Sara Peerun on Email Contact or call Tel: +44(0)20-7336-6100.

SOURCE Visiongain

Contact:
Visiongain