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find Keyword "Composite scaffold material" 2 results
  • Research Progress of Myocardial Tissue Engineering Extracellular Matrix

    The establishing of myocardial tissue engineering techniques not only solve a series of issues that generate in cell and tissue transplantation after myocardial infarction, but also create a platform for selecting better materials and transplantation techniques. However, both experimental animal studies and recent clinical trials indicate that current transplantation techniques still have many defects, mainly including lack of suitable seed cells, low survival rate and low differentiation rate after transplantation. In this context, extracellular matrix (ECM), as myocardial tissue engineering scaffold materials, has gained increasing attention and become a frontier and focus of medical research in recent years. ECM is no longer merely regarded as a scaffold or a tissue, but plays an important role in providing essential signals to influence major intracellular pathways such as cell proliferation, differentiation and metabolism. The involved models of ECM can be classified into following types:natural biological scaffold materials, synthetic polymer scaffold materials and composite scaffold materials with more balanced physical and biological properties. This review mainly introduces research progress of ECM in myocardial tissue engineering and ECM materials.

    Release date:2016-08-30 05:50 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON BONE DEFECT REPAIR WITH COMPOSITE OF ATTAPULGITE/COLLAGEN TYPE I/POLY (CAPROLACTONE) IN RABBITS

    ObjectiveTo investigate the effect of repairing radial bone defect with scaffold material of attapulgite/collagen type I/poly (caprolactone) (ATP/Col I/PCL) in rabbits and the possibility as bone graft substitutes. MethodsATP/Col I/PCL materials were prepared via adding ATP to hexafluoroisopropanol after dissolved Col I/PCL (3∶2), and Col I/PCL materials via dissolving Col I/PCL (3∶2) in hexafluoroisopropanol served as control. The structure of scaffolds was observed under scanning electron microscope (SEM). Twenty-four Japanese white rabbits (male, 2 months old) were used to establish the bilateral radius defect model of 15 mm in length, and randomly divided into group A (6 rabbits, 12 defects), group B (9 rabbits, 18 defects), and group C (9 rabbits, 18 defects); then the Col I/PCL scaffold was implanted in the bone defect area in group B, the ATP/Col I/PCL scaffold in group C, no treatment was done in group A as control. The general condition of rabbits was observed after operation, and bone defect repair was evaluated by X-ray at 4, 8, and 12 weeks. At 12 weeks, the tissue of defect area was harvested for the general, SEM, Micro-CT, histological, and immunohistochemical staining to observe defect repair and material degradation. ResultsSEM observation showed that two kinds of materials were porous structure, ATP/Col I/PCL structure was more dense than Col I/PCL. All animals survived to the end of experiment, and no incision infection occurred during repair process.X-ray films showed that the bone marrow cavity was re-opened in defect area of group C with time, the repair effect was superior to that of groups A and B. At 12 weeks after operation, general observation showed that scaffold material had good fusion with the surrounding tissue in groups B and C, defect was filled with connective tissue in group A. SEM indicated that the surface and pore of the scaffold were covered with a large number of cells and tissues in groups B and C. Micro-CT demonstrated that the new bone volume, bone mineral content, tissue mineral content, and connectivity density of group C were significantly higher than those of groups A and B (P<0.05). The observation of histology and immunohistochemical staining indicated that there were lots of connective tissues in defect area of group A, and ALP, Col I, and OPN were weakly expressed; there were many collagen fibers in scaffold degradation area in group B, and the expression levels of ALP, Col I, and OPN were higher than those of group A; there was few new bone in group C, the degradation rate of the scaffold was slower than that of group B, and the expression of Col I and OPN were enhanced, while ALP was weakened when compared with groups A and B. ConclusionATP/Col I/PCL composite scaffold material can degrade in vivo, and has dense three-dimensional porous structure, good biocompatibility, and high potentiality of bone repair, so it can be used as bone substitute material.

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