Capillary Forces and Bone Regeneration in Bone Scaffolds
Amy J. Wagoner Johnson, Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
More than 1.5 million people undergo bone graft procedures annually in
the US to repair defects that will not heal spontaneously. These defects
severely decrease quality of life and are an economic burden to those
affected and to the health care system. The already considerable demand
is growing rapidly as the population ages and life expectancy increases.
The biggest technical and scientific challenge to treating these
defects is in achieving complete osteointegration. There are promising
approaches that combine scaffolds with exogenous cells and growth
factors; however, these approaches are complex, expensive, and are still
often considered to be too risky to the patient. Our approach is to use
capillary action to impregnate biphasic calcium phosphate (BCP)
scaffolds that have macro and microporosity, with cells at the time of
implantation. Three groups of samples, DRY, WET, and samples without
micropores (NMP), were implanted for 3 weeks and then imaged using
microcomputed tomography and assessed by histology. WET samples had
microporosity, but were infiltrated with PBS prior to implantation.
After three weeks, the average bone volume fraction was the same for DRY
versus WET, and both were greater than NMP. However, the distribution
of bone and the depth of bone growth was significantly enhanced for DRY
samples compared to WET and NMP. The results have important implications
in scaffold design and use of this mechanism will help to address the
challenge of incomplete osteointegration in scaffold-based bone repair.
Further, it will do so without the use of growth factors or exogenous
cells.
|
|