| Literature DB >> 28809213 |
Macarena Perán1, María Angel García2, Elena Lopez-Ruiz3, Gema Jiménez4, Juan Antonio Marchal4,5.
Abstract
Nanotechnologists have become involved in regenerative medicine via creation of biomaterials and nanostructures with potential clinical implications. Their aim is to develop systems that can mimic, reinforce or even create in vivo tissue repair strategies. In fact, in the last decade, important advances in the field of tissue engineering, cell therapy and cell delivery have already been achieved. In this review, we will delve into the latest research advances and discuss whether cell and/or tissue repair devices are a possibility. Focusing on the application of nanotechnology in tissue engineering research, this review highlights recent advances in the application of nano-engineered scaffolds designed to replace or restore the followed tissues: (i) skin; (ii) cartilage; (iii) bone; (iv) nerve; and (v) cardiac.Entities:
Keywords: bio-scaffold; nanostructures; nanotechnology; tissue engineering
Year: 2013 PMID: 28809213 PMCID: PMC5452318 DOI: 10.3390/ma6041333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Representative figure showing the annual cost in the United Stated of America for main diseases related to tissue degeneration. The cost is shown in billions of US dollars.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the electrospinning process showing a glass syringe containing polymer solution; a nanofiber jet; a copper collecting plate and a power supply.
Figure 3Human dermal fibroblast can be cultured on electrospun nanofibrous membrane to create in vitro allogeneic dermal substitutes.
Figure 4Synthetic nanoparticles are able to conjugate peptides, growth factors, nitric oxide or other molecules onto the particle surface and act as delivery vehicles.
Clinical trials on the use of nanotechnological devices for tissue regeneration.
| ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier | Clinical trial name | Nanotechnology | Tissue | Status/Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01539980 | Clinical Study on Silk Sericin Wound Dressing for Split-thickness Skin Graft Donor Sites Treatment | Device: Sericin scaffold | Skin | Phase 1 |
| NCT01108263 | Use of INTEGRA™ Flowable Wound Matrix to Manage Diabetic Foot Ulcers | INTEGRA™ Flowable Matrix (Collagen) | Skin | Phase 4 |
| NCT00317629 | Controlled Nitric Oxide-Releasing Patch | Electrospinning-controlled nitric oxide releasing patch | Skin | Phase 3 |
| NCT00729716 | Comparison of BioCart™II With Microfracture for Treatment of Cartilage Defects of the Femoral Condyle | BioCart™II scaffold | Cartilage | Phase 2 |
| NCT01183637 | Evaluation of an Acellular Osteochondral Graft for Cartilage Lesions Pilot Trial (EAGLE Pilot) | bioresorbable scaffold | Bone/Cartilage | Phase 2 |
| NCT01218945 | Development of Bone Grafts Using Adipose-Derived Stem Cells and Different Scaffolds | Bone scaffold | Bone | recruiting participants |
| NCT01435434 | Mononucleotide Autologous Stem Cells and Demineralized Bone Matrix in the Treatment of Non-Union/Delayed Fractures | Ignite®ICS injectable scaffold | Bone | Not yet recruiting |
| NCT00948025 | A Comparative Post-Marketing Study of Commercially Available Peripheral Nerve Gap Repair Options (CHANGE) | Device: Hollow tube nerve conduit, synthetic or biosynthetic | Nerve | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT01573650 | Optimization of Peripheral Nerve Reconstruction: A Non-Inferiority Trial | Device: Fibrin Conduit | Nerve | not yet open for participant recruitment |
| NCT01270139 | Plasmonic Photothermal Therapy of Flow-Limiting Atherosclerotic Lesions With Silica–Gold Nanoparticles: a First-in-Man Study | Silica–gold nanoparticles. | Heart | Has results |
| NCT00124943 | A Phase I/II Safety Trial of Intracoronary Administration of Systemic Nanoparticle Paclitaxel (ABI-007) for the Prevention of In-Stent Restenosis | Nanoparticle paclitaxel | Heart | Has results |