Literature DB >> 17264409

The effect of pore size on permeability and cell attachment in collagen scaffolds for tissue engineering.

Fergal J O'Brien1, Brendan A Harley, Mary A Waller, Ioannis V Yannas, Lorna J Gibson, Patrick J Prendergast.   

Abstract

The permeability of scaffolds and other three-dimensional constructs used for tissue engineering applications is important as it controls the diffusion of nutrients in and waste out of the scaffold as well as influencing the pressure fields within the construct. The objective of this study was to characterize the permeability/fluid mobility of collagen-GAG scaffolds as a function of pore size and compressive strain using both experimental and mathematical modeling techniques. Scaffolds containing four distinct mean pore sizes (151, 121, 110, 96 microns) were fabricated using a freeze-drying process. An experimental device was constructed to measure the permeability of the scaffold variants at different levels of compressive strain (0, 14, 29 and 40% while a low-density open-cell foam cellular solids model utilizing a tetrakaidecahedral unit cell was used to accurately model the permeability of each scaffold variant at all level of applied strain. The results of both the experimental and the mathematical analysis revealed that scaffold permeability increases with increasing pore size and decreases with increasing compressive strain. The excellent comparison between experimentally measured and predicted scaffold permeability suggests that cellular solids modelling techniques can be utilized to predict scaffold permeability under a variety of physiological loading conditions as well as to predict the permeability of future scaffolds with a wide variety of pore microstructures.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17264409

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Technol Health Care        ISSN: 0928-7329            Impact factor:   1.285


  69 in total

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5.  Solute transport in cyclically deformed porous tissue scaffolds with controlled pore cross-sectional geometries.

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6.  Microarchitecture of three-dimensional scaffolds influences cell migration behavior via junction interactions.

Authors:  Brendan A C Harley; Hyung-Do Kim; Muhammad H Zaman; Ioannis V Yannas; Douglas A Lauffenburger; Lorna J Gibson
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7.  Spatiotemporal Characterization of Extracellular Matrix Microstructures in Engineered Tissue: A Whole-Field Spectroscopic Imaging Approach.

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8.  Effect of pore size and cross-linking of a novel collagen-elastin dermal substitute on wound healing.

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Journal:  J Mater Sci Mater Med       Date:  2013-11-01       Impact factor: 3.896

9.  Mineralized collagen scaffolds induce hMSC osteogenesis and matrix remodeling.

Authors:  Daniel W Weisgerber; Steven R Caliari; Brendan A C Harley
Journal:  Biomater Sci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 6.843

10.  Award Winner in the Young Investigator Category, 2014 Society for Biomaterials Annual Meeting and Exposition, Denver, Colorado, April 16-19, 2014: Periodically perforated core-shell collagen biomaterials balance cell infiltration, bioactivity, and mechanical properties.

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Journal:  J Biomed Mater Res A       Date:  2013-12-31       Impact factor: 4.396

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