| Literature DB >> 15332630 |
A C Jones1, A Sakellariou, A Limaye, C H Arns, T J Senden, T Sawkins, M A Knackstedt, D Rohner, D W Hutmacher, A Brandwood, B K Milthorpe.
Abstract
We illustrate some of the uses of micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) to study tissue-engineered bone using a micro-CT facility for imaging and visualizing biomaterials in three dimensions (3-D). The micro-CT is capable of acquiring 3D X-ray CT images made up of 2000(3) voxels on specimens up to 5 cm in extent with resolutions down to 2 microm. This allows the 3-D structure of tissue-engineered materials to be imaged across orders of magnitude in resolution. This capability is used to examine an explanted, tissue-engineered bone material based on a polycaprolactone scaffold and autologous bone marrow cells. Imaging of the tissue-engineered bone at a scale of 1 cm and resolutions of 10 microm allows one to visualize the complex ingrowth of bone into the polymer scaffold. From a theoretical viewpoint the voxel data may also be used to calculate expected mechanical properties of the tissue-engineered implant. These observations illustrate the benefits of tomography over traditional techniques for the characterization of bone morphology and interconnectivity. As the method is nondestructive it can perform a complimentary role to current histomorphometric techniques.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15332630 DOI: 10.1023/b:jmsm.0000021133.48661.62
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med ISSN: 0957-4530 Impact factor: 3.896