| Literature DB >> 26798575 |
Boonlom Thavornyutikarn1, Nattapon Chantarapanich2, Kriskrai Sitthiseripratip3, George A Thouas1, Qizhi Chen1.
Abstract
Tissue engineering is essentially a technique for imitating nature. Natural tissues consist of three components: cells, signalling systems (e.g. growth factors) and extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM forms a scaffold for its cells. Hence, the engineered tissue construct is an artificial scaffold populated with living cells and signalling molecules. A huge effort has been invested in bone tissue engineering, in which a highly porous scaffold plays a critical role in guiding bone and vascular tissue growth and regeneration in three dimensions. In the last two decades, numerous scaffolding techniques have been developed to fabricate highly interconnective, porous scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications. This review provides an update on the progress of foaming technology of biomaterials, with a special attention being focused on computer-aided manufacturing (Andrade et al. 2002) techniques. This article starts with a brief introduction of tissue engineering (Bone tissue engineering and scaffolds) and scaffolding materials (Biomaterials used in bone tissue engineering). After a brief reviews on conventional scaffolding techniques (Conventional scaffolding techniques), a number of CAM techniques are reviewed in great detail. For each technique, the structure and mechanical integrity of fabricated scaffolds are discussed in detail. Finally, the advantaged and disadvantage of these techniques are compared (Comparison of scaffolding techniques) and summarised (Summary).Entities:
Keywords: Bioceramics; Bone tissue engineering; Computer-aided scaffolding techniques; Scaffold; Solid free-form fabrication
Year: 2014 PMID: 26798575 PMCID: PMC4709372 DOI: 10.1007/s40204-014-0026-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prog Biomater ISSN: 2194-0517
Criteria of an ideal scaffold for bone tissue engineering (Bruder and Caplan 2000; Chen et al. 2008; Liu et al. 2013)
| Criteria | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Biocompatibility | Support and foster cells’ attachment, proliferation and differentiation, and initiate tissue regeneration both in vitro and in vivo |
| Osteoconductivity | Encourage host bone adherence and growth into the scaffold |
| Biodegradability | Be able to degrade at a physiologically relevant rate |
| Mechanical properties | Maintain proper mechanical stability for tissue regeneration |
| Porous structure | Be highly porous (>90 %) and interconnected, with pore diameters between 300 and 500 μm, to allow cells to penetrate into a pore structure, and promote new bone formation, as well as vascularisation. It must be able to deliver nutrients into the scaffold and transport undesirable metabolites outside scaffold |
| Fabrication | Possess desired fabrication capabilities (e.g. being readily produced into irregular shapes of scaffolds that match the defects in the bone of individual patients) |
| Commercialisation | Be fabricated at an acceptable cost for commercialisation |
Composition of natural bone matrix
| Composition | Content and function |
|---|---|
| Biological ceramic | Carbonated HA Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2 accounts for approximately 70 % of the weight of bone. The inorganic component provides compressive stiffness to bone |
| Biological polymer | Roughly one-third of the weight of bone is composed of the organic matter, which is primarily type I collagen and ground substance. Type I collagen fibres are elastic and flexible, and thus tolerate stretching, twisting, and bending. Bone collagen differs slightly from soft-tissue collagen of the same type in |
Mechanical properties and degradation time of synthetic aliphatic polyesters (Rezwan et al. 2006)
| Polymers | Tensile or compressivea strength (MPa) | Modulus (Potijanyakul et al. | Degradation time (months) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PDLLA | Pellet: 35–150a | Film or disk: 1.9–2.4 | 12–16 |
| Film or disk: 29–35 | |||
| PLLA | Pellet: 40–120a | Film or disk: 1.2–3.0 | >24 |
| Film or disk: 28–50 | Fibre: 10–16 | ||
| Fibre: 870–2,300 | |||
| PGA | Fibre: 340–920 | Fibre: 7–14 | 6–12 |
| PLGA | 41.4–55.2 | 1.4–2.8 | Adjustable |
| PCL | 10–15 | 0.15–0.33 | Bulk >24 |
| P3HB | 25–45 | 1.5–1.8 | Very slow |
Mechanical properties of calcium phosphate systems and human bone (Chen et al. 2012)
| Ceramics | Compressive strength (MPa) | Tensile strength (MPa) | Elastic modulus (Potijanyakul et al. | Fracture toughness (MPa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium phosphates | 20–900 | 30–200 | 30–103 | <1.0 |
| HA | >400 | ~40 | ~100 | ~1.0 |
| 45S5 Bioglass® | ~500 | 42 | 35 | 0.5–1 |
| Cortical bone | 130–180 | 50–151 | 12–18 | 6–8 |
Fig. 1Sequence of interfacial reactions involved in forming a bond between bone and bioactive ceramics and glasses (O’Donnell 2012; Jones 2013; Gerhardt and Boccaccini 2010)
Porous composites scaffold designed for bone tissue engineering (Chen et al. 2008; Rezwan et al. 2006)
| Scaffold composite | Percentage of ceramic (wt %) | Porosity (%) | Pore size (μm) | Modulus (MPa) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ceramic | Polymer | ||||
| Amorphous CaP | PLGA | 28–75 | 75 | >100 | 65 |
| HA | PLLA | 50 | 85–96 | 100 × 300 | 10–14 |
| PLGA | 60–75 | 81–91 | 800–1,800 | 2–7.5 | |
| PLGA | 30–40 | 110–150 | 337–1,459 | ||
| Bioglass® | PLGA | 75 | 43 | 89 | 51 |
| PLLA | 20–50 | 77–80 | ~100 | 137–260 | |
| ~10 | |||||
| PLGA | 0.1–1 | 50–300 | |||
| PDLLA | 5–29 | 94 | ~100 | ||
| 10–50 | |||||
| Cancellous bone | 100–500 | 100–500 | |||
Advantages and disadvantages of different scaffolding biomaterials in bone tissue engineering (Chen 2007)
| Biomaterials | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
Naturally derived biopolymers: Collagen Chitosan | Low toxicity; Good biocompatibility; Bioactive; Biodegradability | Low mechanical, thermal and chemical stability; Possibility of immunogenic response |
Synthetic polymers Poly(lactic acid) Poly(glycolic acid) Poly(caprolactone) Poly(lactic- | Good biocompatibility; Biodegradability; Bioresorbability; Good processability; Good ductility | Inflammatory caused by acid degradation products; Limited mechanical property; Slow biodegradability |
Synthetic elastomers Poly(glycerolsebacate) (chemically crosslinked) | Soft elasticity; Good with mild foreign responses; Tuneable degradability | Degrade too fast; Mild cytotoxicity |
Calcium phosphates (e.g. HA, TCP and related calcium phosphate) | Excellent biocompatibility; Supporting cell activity; Good osteoconductivity; | Brittle; Slow biodegradation in the crystalline phase |
| Bioactive silicate glasses | Excellent biocompatibility; Supporting cell activity; Good osteoconductivity; Vascularisation; Rapid gene expression; Tailorable degradation rate | Brittle and weak |
Composites (containing bioactive phases) | Excellent biocompatibility; Supporting cell activity; Good osteoconductivity; Tailorable degradation rate; Improved mechanical properties | Still not as good as natural bone matrix; Complex fabrication |
Scaffold design parameters for bone tissue engineering application (Temenoff et al. 2000)
| Parameters | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Porosity | Maximum without compromising mechanical properties significantly |
| Pore size | 300–500 |
| Pore structure | Highly interconnected |
| Mechanical properties | |
| Cancellous bone | Tension and compression |
| Strength: 5–10 MPa | |
| Modulus: 50–100 MPa | |
| Cortical bone | Tension |
Strength: 80–150 MPa Modulus: 17–20 GPa | |
| Compression | |
| Strength: 130–220 MPa | |
| Modulus: 17–20 GPa | |
| Fracture toughness: 6–8 MPa | |
| Derivative properties | |
| Degradation time | Must be tailored to match the application in patients |
| Degradation mechanism | Bulk or surface erosion |
| Biocompatibility | No chronic inflammation |
| Sterilisability | Sterilisable without altering material properties |
Fig. 2Schematic presentation of commonly used techniques for scaffold fabrication: a solvent casting/particulate leaching; b freeze-drying; c TIPS; d gas foaming and supercritical fluid processing; and e electrospinning (Puppi et al. 2010)
Fig. 3Flowchart of the powder sintering method to produce a porous ceramic scaffold (Chen 2011)
Methods of obtaining green bodies for 3D porous ceramics
| Processes | References |
|---|---|
| Dry processes | |
| 1. Loose-packing | |
| 2. Compaction | (Brovarone et al. |
| Uniaxial-pressing | |
| Cold-isostatic-pressing (CIP) | |
| Wet processes | |
| 3. Slip-casting | (Montanaro et al. |
| 4. Injection-moulding | |
| 5. Phaseseparation/freeze-drying | (Fukasawa et al. |
| 6. Polymer-replication | (Chen et al. |
| 7. Gel-casting | (Ramay and Zhang |
Fig. 4Flowchart of fabrication of ceramic or glass foams via polymer foam replication (Chen 2011)
Fig. 5Flowchart of the production of bioactive glass foams using sol–gel process (Chen 2011)
Fig. 6Typical pore morphologies of porous scaffolds by various techniques: a solvent casting/particulate leaching (Dalton et al. 2009); b freeze-drying (Morsi et al. 2008); c TIPS (Dalton et al. 2009); d gas foaming (Morsi et al. 2008); e electrospinning (Dalton et al. 2009); f replication technique (Chen et al. 2008); g sol–gel technique (Sepulveda et al. 2002)
Summary of advantages and disadvantages of each conventional technique commonly used in scaffold fabrication (Chen 2011; Hutmacher 2000; Leong et al. 2003)
| Technique | Pore size (μm) | Porosity (%) | Architecture | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solvent casting/particulate leaching | 30–300 | 20–50 | Spherical pores | Simple method; controlled porosity and pore size | Possibility of residual of solvent and salt particles; structures generally isotropic; insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application |
| Freeze-drying | 15–35 | >90 | High volume of interconnected micropores | Pore structure with high interconnectivity; good porosity | Insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application; small pore sizes |
| Thermally induced phase separation | 5–600 | <90 | High volume of interconnected micropores | Simple method; high porosities; pore structure with high interconnectivity; controllable structure and pore size by varying preparation conditions | Long time to sublime solvent; possibility of solvent residual; shrinkage issues; small scale production |
| Gas foaming/supercritical fluid processing | 30–700 | >85 | High volume of non-interconnected micropores | Free of toxic solvents; control of porosity | Insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application; inadequate pore interconnectivity; possibility of closed pore structure; formation of an outer skin |
| Textile technology (electrospinning) | <1–10 | 90 | Simple method; high interconnected porosity; high surface area to volume ratio | Insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application; possibility of solvent residual; limitation of thickness | |
| Powder-forming processes (bioglass produced by replication technique) | 300–700 | >80 | High volume of interconnected micropores | Simple method; porous structure similar to sponge bone; highly porous and with open pores; free of toxic chemicals | Insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application |
| Sol–gel techniques (bioactive glasses) | >600 | >70 | High surface area; microstructure similar to that of dry human trabecular bone | Insufficient mechanical integrity for use in load-bearing application; possibility of solvent residual |
Fig. 7The designed scaffold unit cells based on different feature primitives (Sun et al. 2007)
Fig. 8Cross-sectional structure viewed in the X–Z plane and direction of the FDM-build part (Zein et al. 2002)
Fig. 9Flowchart presenting typical CAM technology (Leong et al. 2003)
Fig. 10Schematic representation of an SLA system (Chu 2006; Bartolo et al. 2008; Hopkinson and Dickens 2006)
Fig. 11Images of PDLLA scaffolds built by SLA. a Photograph; and b SEM micrograph (scale bars represent 500 μm) (Melchels et al. 2009)
Fig. 12Examples of bioceramics scaffolds built by advanced SLA: structures prepared from a HA and TCP using μSLA system (Seol et al. 2013); b methacrylated oligolactones using a TPP system (Weiss et al. 2011); and c 45S5 Bioglass® using DLP system (Tesavibul et al. 2012)
Fig. 13Schematic representation of the SLS system (Chu 2006; Bartolo et al. 2008; Hopkinson and Dickens 2006)
Fig. 14Images of PHBV/TCP composite scaffolds built by SLS: a photograph; and b SEM morphology (Duan et al. 2010)
Fig. 15Schematic representation of the 3DP system (Fielding et al. 2012)
Fig. 16A scaffold with two distinct regions: 90 % porous D,L-PLGA/L-PLA as the cartilage region (upper side) and 55 % porous cloverleaf-shaped L-PLGA/TCP as the bone region (lower side) (Sherwood et al. 2002)
Fig. 17Examples of bioceramic scaffolds produced by 3DP: a TCP and HA photograph; b SEM image of TCP; and c SEM image of HA (Warnke et al. 2010). The magnifications of b and c are the same
Fig. 18Schematic representation of the FDM system (Zein et al. 2002)
Fig. 19SEM images of PCL/TCP composite scaffolds obtained from FDM: a structure of top view with inset of cross-sectional view; and b osteoblast cells attached on the scaffold surface (Zhou et al. 2007)
Fig. 20Schematic representation of MHDS (Kim and Cho 2009)
Fig. 21SEM images of PCL/PLGA scaffold fabricated via MHDS (Lee et al. 2012)
Fig. 22Schematic representation of LDM (Xiong et al. 2002)
Fig. 23Images of a PLLA/TCP composite scaffold made in LDM process, SEM images of the cross-section of the scaffold; b low magnified; c high magnified (Xiong et al. 2002); d multi-material (PLGA/collagen) scaffold made in M-LDM process; and e SEM images of the interface of the scaffold (Liu et al. 2009)
Fig. 24Schematic representation of PED (Wang et al. 2004)
Fig. 25SEM images of a PCL scaffold fabricated via PED; b low magnified; and c high magnified (Shor et al. 2009)
Fig. 26Schematic representation of PAM (Vozzi et al. 2002)
Fig. 27Light microscopy of the PAM-printed PLLA/CNT composite scaffolds (Vozzi et al. 2013)
Fig. 28Schematic representation of robocasting (Martínez-Vázquez et al. 2010)
Fig. 29SEM images of a surface view of a glass (6P53B) scaffold with a gradient pore size; and b cross sections of the scaffold (Fu et al. 2011)
Fig. 30Schematic representation of 3D-Bioplotter® (Landers et al. 2002; Gurr and Mülhaupt 2012)
Fig. 31SEM micrographs of a a scaffold obtained with the 3D-Bioplotter® technology; b cross-sectional view of the scaffold; and c the surface morphology (Oliveira et al. 2010)
Fig. 323D scaffolds manufactured by various SFF techniques: a SLA; b SLS; c 3DP; and d FDM (Dalton et al. 2009)
Summary of key characteristics, advantages and disadvantages of SFF scaffolding techniques
| Technique | Layer thickness ( | Resolution ( | Typical accuracy ( | Porosity (%) and pore size ( | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Photopolymerisation-based processing | ||||||||||
| Stereolithography (SLA) | 25–150 | 14–150 | <50 | <90 20–1,000 | Good surface finish; possibly build transparent parts; excellent accuracy; anatomically shaped structures | Expensive machinery; support structure needed; the limited choice of resin available; use of mostly toxic resins; shrinkage during polymerisation | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Micro-stereolithography (μSLA) | <1 | 0.5–10 | 0.2 | – 100–300 | Similar to SLS; the highest resolution with micrometre scale | Similar to SLA | (Choi et al. | |||
| Two-photon polymerisation (TPP) | <5 | 0.1–4 | 0.2 | – | Similar to SLS; low laser intensity; very fine lateral resolutions; fast processing | Similar to SLA | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Digital light processing (DLP) | 15-70 | 40 | <0.4 | <90 500 | Similar to SLS; no use of laser; higher resolution; higher build speed | Similar to SLA | (Felzmann et al. | |||
| Powder-based processing | ||||||||||
| Selective laser sintering (SLS) | 75-150 | 50-1000 | 50-100 | <40 30–2,500 | Solvent free; no need for support material; fast processing | Expensive machinery; difficulty removing trapped powder; high temperatures in the chamber; powdery surface finish | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Surface selective laser sintering (SSLS) | 200 | 150-200 | <20 | – | Similar to SLS; reduction of heat operating temperature; possible incorporation of bioactive agents | Similar to SLS | (Antonov et al. | |||
| Three-dimensional printing (3DP) | 50-150 | 50-300 | 50-100 | <45–60 45–1,600 | Easy process; low cost; low heat effect on raw powder; no need for support material; fast processing | Poor surface finish, accuracy and mechanical properties; difficulty removing trapped powder; powdery surface finish | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Extrusion-based processing | ||||||||||
| Fused deposition modelling (FDM) | 50–750 | 100–500 | 100 | <80 100–2,000 | Solvent free; no materials trapped in the scaffolds; good mechanical strength; wide range of materials; versatile in lay-down pattern; low costs | Needs filament preparation; limited choice of filament materials; high heat effect on material; difficult fabrication for scaffolds with small pore sizes; medium accuracy | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Multi-head deposition system (MHDS) | 200 | several tens of microns | several tens of microns | ~70 600 | Enhanced range of material use and pore architecture; high resolution | High heat effect on material | (Kim and Cho | |||
| Low-temperature deposition manufacturing (LDM) and (M-LDM) | 150 | 300-500 | ~88 200–500 | Enhanced range of material use; ability to incorporate biomolecules | Solvent use; requires freeze drying | (Yeong et al. | ||||
| Precision extruding deposition (PED) | 250 | 100–500 | 100 | <70 200–500 | No requirement of filament preparation | High heat effect on material; rigid filament | (Melchels et al. | |||
| Pressure-assisted microsyringe (PAM)/(PAM2) | 150–200 | 10–1000 | 5–10 | 70 10-600 | Enhanced range of material use; ability to incorporate biomolecules; very fine resolution | Small nozzle inhibits incorporation of particles; narrow range of printable viscosities; solvent use | (Yeong et al. | |||
| Robocasting (direct-write assembly) | 250 | 100–450 | few microns | <90 5–100 | Enhanced range of material use; possible fabrication of highly concentrated suspension; no need of support material; excellent resolution | Expensive machinery; precise control of ink properties is crucial | (Melchels et al. | |||
| 3D-Bioplotter® | 50–300 | 100–500 | 100 | – 200–400 | Enhanced range of material use and conditions; ability to incorporate biomolecules, proteins and cells | Low strength; smooth surface; low accuracy; slow processing; calibration for new material; suitability for soft-tissue area | (Yeong et al. | |||
Comparison of mechanical properties in different RP techniques
| Technique | Scaffolding materials | Tensile strength (MPa) | Compressive strength (MPa) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stereolithography (SLA) | Liquid form of photopolymer | Up to 75 | ~57 | (Swift and Booker |
| Selective laser sintering (SLS) | Thermoplastics | ~50 | 60–75 | (Swift and Booker |
| Three-dimensional printing (3DP) | Plastic powder | <5 | <5 | (Swift and Booker |
| Fused deposition modelling (FDM) | Thermoplastics | 35–60 | 45–70 | (Swift and Booker |