Papers by Keyword: Vascular Tissue Engineering

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Abstract: Functional vascular tissue engineering aims to produce blood vessels in vitro in a controlled environment named bioreactor. In order to control the growth and remodeling of vascular tissues, suitable measurements should be made on the construct in situ, i.e. during the growth. These measurements will feed the controller with information in order to take efficient control decisions. The non-destructive measurement of compliance or elastic modulus in vitro is a potential indicator of the vascular construct maturity. This work shows that compliance and elastic modulus are related: they can be estimated during the growth of constructs in a bioreactor, and thus provide useful feedback information to the controller.
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Abstract: Poly(butylenes succinate) (PBSU) had good biocompatibility and biodegradability, but it is left unexplored for the possible application of PBSU in tissue engineering. The aim of this study was to compare PBSU and poly (lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) scaffolds prepared by electrospinning technique as vascular tissue engineering materials. Both scaffolds were characterized by fiber morphology, pore structure and mechanical properties. Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and endothelial cells (ECs) were seeded on the electrospun PBSU and PLGA scaffolds and cultured for different time periods. Cell adhesion and proliferation on the scaffolds were measured by MTT assay, while SEM was used for observing cell morphology on the scaffolds. The results showed that fiber diameter of the electrospun scaffolds ranged from 300nm to 800nm and their porosities were higher than 90%. The electrospun PBSU scaffolds showed a high tensile strength of 2.06±0.11MPa, whereas the ultimate tensile strength of the electrospun PLGA scaffolds reached 14.31±5.24MPa. Cell adhesion efficacy had no significant difference between PBSU and PLGA scaffolds, but cell proliferation rate on PLGA scaffolds was significantly higher than that on PBSU scaffolds after 7 days of culture. Cell morphology was similar on both scaffolds with the polygonal shape for ECs and spindle-like shape for SMCs. From these results, the present in vitro study revealed that as compared to PLGA scaffolds, the electrospun PBSU scaffolds showed lower tensile strength and slower proliferation rate, but as regards the biocompatibility and pore structure, the electrospun PBSU scaffolds had a potential application in vascular tissue engineering.
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Abstract: Porosity and pore size are needed for successful cell seeding and proliferation into porous scaffolds. This study was focused on a hydrogel-seeding method to improve cell adhesion and proliferation in tubular porous scaffolds for vascular grafts application. Tubular scaffolds were fabricated from a biodegradable elastic polymer, poly(L-lactide-co-ε-caprolactone) (PLCL) (50:50, Mn 1.58×105), by an extrusion-particulate leaching method. Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) were dispersed in collagen hydrogel and then seeded into the tubular PLCL scaffolds having various pore sizes, 50-100 μm, 100-200 μm, and 300-500 μm, respectively. As a result, the efficiency of cell adhesion and proliferation was dependent on the pore size of the scaffolds. Especially, the cell proliferation efficiency was improved by using the hydrogel-seeding method as compared with by using a previously established method. In summary, this study demonstrates that the efficiency of cell adhesion and proliferation was dependent on the pore size of the scaffolds in the hydrogel-seeding method.
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