| Literature DB >> 25883972 |
Marco A Velasco1, Carlos A Narváez-Tovar2, Diego A Garzón-Alvarado3.
Abstract
A review about design, manufacture, and mechanobiology of biodegradable scaffolds for bone tissue engineering is given. First, fundamental aspects about bone tissue engineering and considerations related to scaffold design are established. Second, issues related to scaffold biomaterials and manufacturing processes are discussed. Finally, mechanobiology of bone tissue and computational models developed for simulating how bone healing occurs inside a scaffold are described.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25883972 PMCID: PMC4391163 DOI: 10.1155/2015/729076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Mechanical properties of bone. From Bandyopadyay-Ghosh [39] and Knudson [40].
| Property | Cortical bone | Cancellous bone |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength (MPa) | 50–150 | 10–100 |
| Compressive strength (MPa) | 130–230 | 2–12 |
| Young's modulus (GPa) | 7–30 | 0.02–0.5 |
| Strain to failure (%) | 1–3 | 5–7 |
| Shear strength (MPa) | 53–70 | |
| Shear modulus (GPa) | 3 | |
Mechanical properties of typical polymers and copolymers for tissue engineering. From Maurus and Kaeding, Wu et al., and Middleton and Tipton [131, 137, 141].
| Materials | Compressive/tensile strength (MPa) | Young's modulus (GPa) | Elongation (%) | Melting point (°C) | Glass-transition temp (°C) | Loss of strength (months) | Loss of mass (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLLA poly(L-lactide) | 28–2300 | 4.8 | 5–10 | 175 | 60–65 | 6 | 24–68 |
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| PDLLA | 29–150 | 1.9 | 3–10 | 165–180 | 40–69 | 1-2 | 12–16 |
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| PGA | 350–920 | 12.5 | 15–20 | 200 | 35–40 | 1-2 | 6–12 |
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| 85/15 DLPLG | 50–55 | 5-6 | |||||
| 75/25 DLPLG | 41.4–55.2 | 2.0 | 3–10 | Amorphous | 50–55 | 1-2 | 4-5 |
| 65/35 DLPLG | 45–50 | 3-4 | |||||
| 50/50 DLPLG | 45–50 | 1-2 | |||||
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| PCL poly( | 23 | 0.4 | 300–500 | 57 | 50–60 | 9–12 | >24 |
Porous biocomposites used for bone tissue engineering. From Chen et al. [142] and Wahl and Czernuszka [143].
| Biocomposite | Percentage of ceramic (wt.%) | Porosity (%) | Pore size ( | Strength (MPa) | Modulus (MPa) | Ultimate strain (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amorphous CaP | PLGA | 28 to 75 | 75 | >100 | 65 | ||
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| Chitosan-gelatin | 10 to 70 | 322 to 355 | 0.32 to 0.88 | 3.94 to 10.88 | ||
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| HA | PLLA | 50 | 85 to 96 | 100 × 300 | 0.39 | 10 to 14 | |
| PLGA | 60 to 75 | 81 to 91 | 800 to 1800 | 0.07 to 0.22 | 2 to 7.5 | ||
| PLGA | 30 to 40 | 110 to 150 | 337 to 1459 | ||||
| Collagen | Variable | ~0 | ~0 | 34–60 | 0.44–2.82 | ||
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| PLG | 75 | 43 | 89 | 0.42 | 51 | ||
| Bioglass | PLLA | 20 to 50 | 77 to 80 | Approximately 100 (macro); approximately 10 (micro) | 1.5 to 3.9 | 137 to 260 | 1.1 to 13.7 |
| PLG | 0.1 to 1 | 50 to 300 | |||||
| PDLLA | 5 to 29 | 94 | Approximately 100 (macro); 10 to 50 (micro) | 0.07 to 0.08 | 0.65 to 1.2 | 7.21 to 13.3 | |
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| Phosphate glass A/W | PLA-PDLLA | 40 | 93 to 97 | 98 to 154 | 0.017 to 0.020 | 0.075 to 0.12 | |
| PDLLA | 20 to 40 | 85.5 to 95.2 | |||||
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| Bioglass | PGS | 90 | >90 | 300 to 500 | 0.4 to 1.0 | ||
Properties of bone graft substitutes. Adapted from Ma and Elisseeff [150] and Brown et al. [151].
| Property | Allograft | Polymers | Ceramics | Composites | Cell based therapies | Growth factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biocompatibility | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Osteoconductivity | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Osteoinductivity | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Osteogenicity | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | No |
| Osteointegrity | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Mechanical match | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Resorption mechanisms for biomaterials for scaffolds used in bone regeneration. From Bohner [37]*.
| Material type | Material | Degradation mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Bioglass | Generally: very limited degradation through partial dissolution | |
| Plaster of Paris | Dissolution | |
| Ceramic | Dicalcium phosphate dehydrate | Dissolution and/or conversion into an apatite |
| Calcium carbonate | Dissolution or cell-mediated depending on the mineral phase | |
| Dicalcium phosphate (DCP) | Cell-mediated | |
| Sintered hydroxyapatite | Practically no degradation | |
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| Metal | Magnesium (alloy) | Corrosion |
| Iron (alloy) | Corrosion | |
| Tantalum, titanium | Practically no degradation | |
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| Polymer | Polylactides, polyglycolides | Hydrolysis |
| Cellulose | Transport to lymph nodes | |
∗Reprinted from Materials Today, with permission from Elsevier [37].
Figure 1Graphic representation of mechanoregulatory models proposed by (a) Pauwels [204], (b) Carter et al. [200], (c) Claes and Heigele [201], and (d) Prendergast [205]. Adapted from Geris et al. [34] with permission from the Royal Society.
Figure 2Rate of bone change as a function of the strain energy density (U). From Frost [197].
Computational mechanobiological models for fracture healing and bone regeneration on scaffolds.
| Modeled phenomena | Input variable | Output variables | Material | Cells considered | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluid motion of a bone substitute applied to the high tibial osteotomy with three different wedge sizes | Fluid-induced shear stress | Elastic modulus, Poisson's ratio, porosity, and permeability values that optimize the internal fluid motion | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
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| Cell growth | Local oxygen tension | Cell density | PLGA | Preosteoblast | [ |
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| Cell differentiation and proliferation on | Shear strain and fluidic velocity | Cell differentiation | PLGA | Mesenchymal cells | [ |
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| Cell growth on porous scaffolds | Cell density | Cell density | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
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| Cell growth and distribution | Cell density | Cell density and distribution | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
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| Cell differentiation and proliferation on | Porosity, Young's modulus, and dissolution rate | Cell differentiation | PLGA | Mesenchymal cells | [ |
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| Cell differentiation and proliferation on biodegradable scaffold | Scaffold stiffness, porosity, resorption kinetics, pore size, and preseeding | Cell growth | Polymer | Not specified | [ |
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| Mechanical behavior and drug delivery | Stress loads according to different position | Drug release | Hydroxyapatite | Not specified | [ |
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| Cell growth and differentiation | Force | Cell differentiation | Not specified | Mesenchymal cells | [ |
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| Proliferation and hypertrophy of chondrocytes in the growth plate | Stress | Cell proliferation | Not specified | Chondrocyte | [ |