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Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds

Pore architecture in bioceramic scaffolds plays an important role in facilitating vascularization efficiency during bone repair or orbital reconstruction. Many investigations have explored this relationship but lack integrating pore architectural features in a scaffold, hindering optimization of arc...

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Autores principales: Wu, Fanghui, Yang, Jun, Ke, Xiurong, Ye, Shuo, Bao, Zhaonan, Yang, Xianyan, Zhong, Cheng, Shen, Miaoda, Xu, Sanzhong, Zhang, Lei, Gou, Zhongru, Yang, Guojing
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9039507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480859
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbab077
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author Wu, Fanghui
Yang, Jun
Ke, Xiurong
Ye, Shuo
Bao, Zhaonan
Yang, Xianyan
Zhong, Cheng
Shen, Miaoda
Xu, Sanzhong
Zhang, Lei
Gou, Zhongru
Yang, Guojing
author_facet Wu, Fanghui
Yang, Jun
Ke, Xiurong
Ye, Shuo
Bao, Zhaonan
Yang, Xianyan
Zhong, Cheng
Shen, Miaoda
Xu, Sanzhong
Zhang, Lei
Gou, Zhongru
Yang, Guojing
author_sort Wu, Fanghui
collection PubMed
description Pore architecture in bioceramic scaffolds plays an important role in facilitating vascularization efficiency during bone repair or orbital reconstruction. Many investigations have explored this relationship but lack integrating pore architectural features in a scaffold, hindering optimization of architectural parameters (geometry, size and curvature) to improve vascularization and consequently clinical outcomes. To address this challenge, we have developed an integrating design strategy to fabricate different pore architectures (cube, gyroid and hexagon) with different pore dimensions (∼350, 500 and 650 μm) in the silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds via digital light processing technique. The sintered scaffolds maintained high-fidelity pore architectures similar to the printing model. The hexagon- and gyroid-pore scaffolds exhibited the highest and lowest compressive strength (from 15 to 55 MPa), respectively, but the cube-pore scaffolds showed appreciable elastic modulus. Moreover, the gyroid-pore architecture contributed on a faster ion dissolution and mass decay in vitro. It is interesting that both μCT and histological analyses indicate vascularization efficiency was challenged even in the 650-μm pore region of hexagon-pore scaffolds within 2 weeks in rabbit models, but the gyroid-pore constructs indicated appreciable blood vessel networks even in the 350-μm pore region at 2 weeks and high-density blood vessels were uniformly invaded in the 500- and 650-μm pore at 4 weeks. Angiogenesis was facilitated in the cube-pore scaffolds in comparison with the hexagon-pore ones within 4 weeks. These studies demonstrate that the continuous pore wall curvature feature in gyroid-pore architecture is an important implication for biodegradation, vascular cell migration and vessel ingrowth in porous bioceramic scaffolds.
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spelling pubmed-90395072022-04-26 Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds Wu, Fanghui Yang, Jun Ke, Xiurong Ye, Shuo Bao, Zhaonan Yang, Xianyan Zhong, Cheng Shen, Miaoda Xu, Sanzhong Zhang, Lei Gou, Zhongru Yang, Guojing Regen Biomater Research Article Pore architecture in bioceramic scaffolds plays an important role in facilitating vascularization efficiency during bone repair or orbital reconstruction. Many investigations have explored this relationship but lack integrating pore architectural features in a scaffold, hindering optimization of architectural parameters (geometry, size and curvature) to improve vascularization and consequently clinical outcomes. To address this challenge, we have developed an integrating design strategy to fabricate different pore architectures (cube, gyroid and hexagon) with different pore dimensions (∼350, 500 and 650 μm) in the silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds via digital light processing technique. The sintered scaffolds maintained high-fidelity pore architectures similar to the printing model. The hexagon- and gyroid-pore scaffolds exhibited the highest and lowest compressive strength (from 15 to 55 MPa), respectively, but the cube-pore scaffolds showed appreciable elastic modulus. Moreover, the gyroid-pore architecture contributed on a faster ion dissolution and mass decay in vitro. It is interesting that both μCT and histological analyses indicate vascularization efficiency was challenged even in the 650-μm pore region of hexagon-pore scaffolds within 2 weeks in rabbit models, but the gyroid-pore constructs indicated appreciable blood vessel networks even in the 350-μm pore region at 2 weeks and high-density blood vessels were uniformly invaded in the 500- and 650-μm pore at 4 weeks. Angiogenesis was facilitated in the cube-pore scaffolds in comparison with the hexagon-pore ones within 4 weeks. These studies demonstrate that the continuous pore wall curvature feature in gyroid-pore architecture is an important implication for biodegradation, vascular cell migration and vessel ingrowth in porous bioceramic scaffolds. Oxford University Press 2021-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9039507/ /pubmed/35480859 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbab077 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wu, Fanghui
Yang, Jun
Ke, Xiurong
Ye, Shuo
Bao, Zhaonan
Yang, Xianyan
Zhong, Cheng
Shen, Miaoda
Xu, Sanzhong
Zhang, Lei
Gou, Zhongru
Yang, Guojing
Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title_full Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title_fullStr Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title_full_unstemmed Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title_short Integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
title_sort integrating pore architectures to evaluate vascularization efficacy in silicate-based bioceramic scaffolds
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9039507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480859
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbab077
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