| Literature DB >> 27014369 |
Eseelle K Hendow1, Pauline Guhmann1, Bernice Wright1, Panagiotis Sofokleous1, Nina Parmar1, Richard M Day1.
Abstract
Tissue engineering is a rapidly advancing field that is likely to transform how medicine is practised in the near future. For hollow organs such as those found in the cardiovascular and respiratory systems or gastrointestinal tract, tissue engineering can provide replacement of the entire organ or provide restoration of function to specific regions. Larger tissue-engineered constructs often require biomaterial-based scaffold structures to provide support and structure for new tissue growth. Consideration must be given to the choice of material and manufacturing process to ensure the de novo tissue closely matches the mechanical and physiological properties of the native tissue. This review will discuss some of the approaches taken to date for fabricating hollow organ scaffolds and the selection of appropriate biomaterials.Entities:
Keywords: Biocompatible; Biomaterials; Regenerative medicine; Scaffold; Tissue engineering
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014369 PMCID: PMC4806416 DOI: 10.1186/s13069-016-0040-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fibrogenesis Tissue Repair ISSN: 1755-1536
Various fabrication techniques for biomaterial scaffolds
| Fabrication method | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tissue decellularisation | Tissues with high ECM content, e.g. trachea, heart valves | Native composition (ECM), retains mechanical properties and shape of organ | Immunogenicity due to incomplete decellularisation, loss of ECM, requires donor organ | [ |
| Electrohydrodynamic (EHD) processing | Drug delivery, hard and soft tissue engineering, wound healing | Fibres, particles and encapsulated particle production, biocompatible, biodegradable, manufacturing parameters adjustable to tailor product, control over pore size and distribution | Inhomogeneous distribution of seeded cells | [ |
| Electrospinning | Drug delivery, hard and soft tissue engineering, wound healing | Production of fibres and encapsulated fibres, high porosity, surface area, biocompatible and biodegradable, manufacturing parameters adjustable to tailor product | Inhomogeneous distribution of seeded cells | [ |
| Hydrogels | Scaffolds for cartilage, connective tissue and soft tissue bioengineering, cell delivery, drug delivery, wound healing | Tuneable biodegradability, biomimicry, biocompatible, improves cellular interactions, mimics native ECM, injectable, self-assembly possible in response to pH and temperature, can be incorporated with other materials | Limited mechanical properties, sensitive to the surrounding environment | [ |
| Thermally induced phase separation (TIPS) | Microparticles for tissue engineering, cell delivery, drug delivery | High porosity, biocompatible, biodegradable, 3D scaffold, manufacturing parameters adjustable to tailor product, interconnected porous network, cell proliferation, injectable | Limited open space through scaffold, inhomogeneous size particles, particle aggregation | [ |
| 3D printing | Fully developed constructs | Complex structures mechanically similar to native tissue, fast processing | Limited materials, post-processing | [ |