丝素
体内
软骨
脚手架
体外
生物医学工程
材料科学
化学
生物相容性
组织工程
降级(电信)
丝绸
生物物理学
解剖
复合材料
生物化学
生物
医学
生物技术
冶金
电信
计算机科学
作者
Lilan Gao,Ying Wei,Yansong Tan,Ruixin Li,Chunqiu Zhang,Hong Gao
出处
期刊:Biomaterials advances
日期:2023-06-01
卷期号:149: 213389-213389
被引量:5
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.bioadv.2023.213389
摘要
Silk fibroin-collagen type II scaffolds are promising in cartilage tissue engineering due to their suitable biological functionality to promote proliferation of chondrocytes in vitro. However, their degradation properties, which are of crucial importance as scaffold degradation should consistent with the new tissue formation process, are still unknown. In this study, degradability of silk fibroin-collagen type II cartilage scaffolds was probed both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro degradation experiments show that the scaffolds decreased 32.25 % ± 0.62 %, 34.27 % ± 0.96 %, 36.27 % ± 2.39 % in weight after 8 weeks of degradation at the irrigation velocity of 0 mL/min, 7.89 mL/min and 15.79 mL/min. The degradation ratio, which increases with time and increasing irrigation velocity, is described by combining the built mathematic model and finite element modeling method. The scaffolds after 8 weeks of degradation in vitro keep their mechanical structural integrity to support new tissues. In vivo degradation experiments conducted in rabbits further show that the scaffolds degrade gradually, be absorbed with time and finally collapse in structure. The degradation process is accompanied by the growth of fibrous tissues and the scaffold is filled by fibrous tissues after 12 weeks of implantation. Immunohistology analysis shows that the inflammation caused by scaffolds is controllable and gradually alleviates with time. To sum up, silk fibroin-collagen type II cartilage scaffolds, which show suitable mechanical properties and biocompatibility during degradation in vitro and in vivo, have great potential in cartilage repair. The novelty of the study is that it not only introduces a mathematical model to predict the irrigation degradation ratio, but also provides experimental degradation data support for clinical application of silk fibroin-collagen type II cartilage scaffolds.
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