Infobox

Bone Choir Scaffolds

Type: Medical Infrastructure
Status: Common in major habitats and hospitals
Era: Mid Diaspora–Present

Bone Choir Scaffolds

Growing replacement organs is straightforward compared to rebuilding a skeleton.

Bone Choir Scaffolds solve this problem through the use of living osteogenic frameworks. These intricate lattices are seeded with engineered bone-forming cells that continuously communicate through biochemical signaling networks. Medical technicians often describe the process as a choir because thousands of microscopic growth sites coordinate their development simultaneously.

Patients requiring skeletal reconstruction are placed within scaffold systems tailored to their anatomy. Missing limbs, damaged vertebrae, crushed rib structures, and even entire pelvic assemblies can be regrown over periods ranging from weeks to months.

The technology proved especially valuable in low-gravity settlements, where conventional bone healing frequently failed. Many Clades possess skeletal architectures too specialized for traditional surgical replacement, making personalized regrowth the only practical option.

In modern hospitals, vast scaffold chambers line regenerative medicine wards. Some contain structures so large they resemble forests of pale branching coral.

The singing is metaphorical.

Usually.

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