| Literature DB >> 31614735 |
Somasundar Mantha1, Sangeeth Pillai2, Parisa Khayambashi3, Akshaya Upadhyay4, Yuli Zhang5, Owen Tao6, Hieu M Pham7, Simon D Tran8.
Abstract
The field of regenerative medicine has tremendous potential for improved treatment outcomes and has been stimulated by advances made in bioengineering over the last few decades. The strategies of engineering tissues and assembling functional constructs that are capable of restoring, retaining, and revitalizing lost tissues and organs have impacted the whole spectrum of medicine and health care. Techniques to combine biomimetic materials, cells, and bioactive molecules play a decisive role in promoting the regeneration of damaged tissues or as therapeutic systems. Hydrogels have been used as one of the most common tissue engineering scaffolds over the past two decades due to their ability to maintain a distinct 3D structure, to provide mechanical support for the cells in the engineered tissues, and to simulate the native extracellular matrix. The high water content of hydrogels can provide an ideal environment for cell survival, and structure which mimics the native tissues. Hydrogel systems have been serving as a supportive matrix for cell immobilization and growth factor delivery. This review outlines a brief description of the properties, structure, synthesis and fabrication methods, applications, and future perspectives of smart hydrogels in tissue engineering.Entities:
Keywords: hydrogels; regenerative medicine; smart hydrogels; tissue engineering
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614735 PMCID: PMC6829293 DOI: 10.3390/ma12203323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Overview of hydrogels and their applications
| Hydrogel | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature responsive hydrogels | Skin tissue engineering, wound covering, cell carriers | [ |
| Light responsive hydrogels | Drug delivery, microfluidic devices | [ |
| Electro responsive hydrogels | Membrane and implant-based drug delivery | [ |
| Magnetic responsive hydrogels | Drug delivery, tissue repair, targeted MRI for disease diagnosis | [ |
| pH-responsive hydrogels | Drug and protein delivery, 3D cell culture | [ |
| Glucose responsive hydrogels | Immunoisolation devices | [ |
| Biochemical responsive hydrogels | Smart sensors and actuators | [ |
| Collagen-based hydrogels | Corneal, tendon tissue engineering | [ |
| Injectable hydrogels | Bone, cartilage and meniscus tissue engineering, drug delivery, Osteo-arthritis therapy | [ |
Figure 1Synthesis of hydrogels in (a) free radical polymerization, (b) physical cross-linking, (c) irradiation cross-linking, and (d) chemical cross-linking.
Figure 2Freeze-drying (lyophilization) technique.
Figure 3Porogen leaching technique.