Cargando…

A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro

Pacemaker systems are an essential tool for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. However, the immune system’s natural response to a foreign body results in the encapsulation of a pacemaker electrode and an impaired energy efficiency by increasing the excitation threshold. The integration of the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Weigel, Tobias, Schmitz, Tobias, Pfister, Tobias, Gaetzner, Sabine, Jannasch, Maren, Al-Hijailan, Reem, Schürlein, Sebastian, Suliman, Salwa, Mustafa, Kamal, Hansmann, Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6162283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30266922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-32790-8
_version_ 1783359110211698688
author Weigel, Tobias
Schmitz, Tobias
Pfister, Tobias
Gaetzner, Sabine
Jannasch, Maren
Al-Hijailan, Reem
Schürlein, Sebastian
Suliman, Salwa
Mustafa, Kamal
Hansmann, Jan
author_facet Weigel, Tobias
Schmitz, Tobias
Pfister, Tobias
Gaetzner, Sabine
Jannasch, Maren
Al-Hijailan, Reem
Schürlein, Sebastian
Suliman, Salwa
Mustafa, Kamal
Hansmann, Jan
author_sort Weigel, Tobias
collection PubMed
description Pacemaker systems are an essential tool for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. However, the immune system’s natural response to a foreign body results in the encapsulation of a pacemaker electrode and an impaired energy efficiency by increasing the excitation threshold. The integration of the electrode into the tissue is affected by implant properties such as size, mechanical flexibility, shape, and dimensionality. Three-dimensional, tissue-like electrode scaffolds render an alternative to currently used planar metal electrodes. Based on a modified electrospinning process and a high temperature treatment, a conductive, porous fiber scaffold was fabricated. The electrical and immunological properties of this 3D electrode were compared to 2D TiN electrodes. An increased surface of the fiber electrode compared to the planar 2D electrode, showed an enhanced electrical performance. Moreover, the migration of cells into the 3D construct was observed and a lower inflammatory response was induced. After early and late in vivo host response evaluation subcutaneously, the 3D fiber scaffold showed no adverse foreign body response. By embedding the 3D fiber scaffold in human cardiomyocytes, a tissue-electrode hybrid was generated that facilitates a high regenerative capacity and a low risk of fibrosis. This hybrid was implanted onto a spontaneously beating, tissue-engineered human cardiac patch to investigate if a seamless electronic-tissue interface is generated. The fusion of this hybrid electrode with a cardiac patch resulted in a mechanical stable and electrical excitable unit. Thereby, the feasibility of a seamless tissue-electrode interface was proven.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6162283
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Nature Publishing Group UK
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-61622832018-10-02 A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro Weigel, Tobias Schmitz, Tobias Pfister, Tobias Gaetzner, Sabine Jannasch, Maren Al-Hijailan, Reem Schürlein, Sebastian Suliman, Salwa Mustafa, Kamal Hansmann, Jan Sci Rep Article Pacemaker systems are an essential tool for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. However, the immune system’s natural response to a foreign body results in the encapsulation of a pacemaker electrode and an impaired energy efficiency by increasing the excitation threshold. The integration of the electrode into the tissue is affected by implant properties such as size, mechanical flexibility, shape, and dimensionality. Three-dimensional, tissue-like electrode scaffolds render an alternative to currently used planar metal electrodes. Based on a modified electrospinning process and a high temperature treatment, a conductive, porous fiber scaffold was fabricated. The electrical and immunological properties of this 3D electrode were compared to 2D TiN electrodes. An increased surface of the fiber electrode compared to the planar 2D electrode, showed an enhanced electrical performance. Moreover, the migration of cells into the 3D construct was observed and a lower inflammatory response was induced. After early and late in vivo host response evaluation subcutaneously, the 3D fiber scaffold showed no adverse foreign body response. By embedding the 3D fiber scaffold in human cardiomyocytes, a tissue-electrode hybrid was generated that facilitates a high regenerative capacity and a low risk of fibrosis. This hybrid was implanted onto a spontaneously beating, tissue-engineered human cardiac patch to investigate if a seamless electronic-tissue interface is generated. The fusion of this hybrid electrode with a cardiac patch resulted in a mechanical stable and electrical excitable unit. Thereby, the feasibility of a seamless tissue-electrode interface was proven. Nature Publishing Group UK 2018-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6162283/ /pubmed/30266922 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-32790-8 Text en © The Author(s) 2018 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Weigel, Tobias
Schmitz, Tobias
Pfister, Tobias
Gaetzner, Sabine
Jannasch, Maren
Al-Hijailan, Reem
Schürlein, Sebastian
Suliman, Salwa
Mustafa, Kamal
Hansmann, Jan
A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title_full A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title_fullStr A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title_full_unstemmed A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title_short A three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
title_sort three-dimensional hybrid pacemaker electrode seamlessly integrates into engineered, functional human cardiac tissue in vitro
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6162283/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30266922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-32790-8
work_keys_str_mv AT weigeltobias athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT schmitztobias athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT pfistertobias athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT gaetznersabine athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT jannaschmaren athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT alhijailanreem athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT schurleinsebastian athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT sulimansalwa athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT mustafakamal athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT hansmannjan athreedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT weigeltobias threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT schmitztobias threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT pfistertobias threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT gaetznersabine threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT jannaschmaren threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT alhijailanreem threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT schurleinsebastian threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT sulimansalwa threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT mustafakamal threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro
AT hansmannjan threedimensionalhybridpacemakerelectrodeseamlesslyintegratesintoengineeredfunctionalhumancardiactissueinvitro