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Novel mechanically competent polysaccharide scaffolds for bone tissue engineering
- Source :
- Biomedical Materials. 6:065005
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- IOP Publishing, 2011.
-
Abstract
- The success of the scaffold-based bone regeneration approach critically depends on the biomaterial's mechanical and biological properties. Cellulose and its derivatives are inherently associated with exceptional strength and biocompatibility due to their β-glycosidic linkage and extensive hydrogen bonding. This polymer class has a long medical history as a dialysis membrane, wound care system and pharmaceutical excipient. Recently cellulose-based scaffolds have been developed and evaluated for a variety of tissue engineering applications. In general porous polysaccharide scaffolds in spite of many merits lack the necessary mechanical competence needed for load-bearing applications. The present study reports the fabrication and characterization of three-dimensional (3D) porous sintered microsphere scaffolds based on cellulose derivatives using a solvent/non-solvent sintering approach for load-bearing applications. These 3D scaffolds exhibited a compressive modulus and strength in the mid-range of human trabecular bone and underwent degradation resulting in a weight loss of 10-15% after 24 weeks. A typical stress-strain curve for these scaffolds showed an initial elastic region and a less-stiff post-yield region similar to that of native bone. Human osteoblasts cultured on these scaffolds showed progressive growth with time and maintained expression of osteoblast phenotype markers. Further, the elevated expression of alkaline phosphatase and mineralization at early time points as compared to heat-sintered poly(lactic acid-glycolic acid) control scaffolds with identical pore properties affirmed the advantages of polysaccharides and their potential for scaffold-based bone regeneration.
- Subjects :
- Scaffold
Materials science
Compressive Strength
Biocompatibility
Biomedical Engineering
Bioengineering
Prosthesis Design
Biomaterials
chemistry.chemical_compound
Tissue engineering
Hardness
Osteogenesis
Polysaccharides
Elastic Modulus
Materials Testing
medicine
Humans
Cellulose
Bone regeneration
Cells, Cultured
Osteoblasts
Tissue Engineering
Tissue Scaffolds
Biomaterial
Osteoblast
Equipment Failure Analysis
medicine.anatomical_structure
Compressive strength
chemistry
Bone Substitutes
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1748605X and 17486041
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biomedical Materials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5a1fb630f727338b82295637d218ad76
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-6041/6/6/065005