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Bone regeneration by means of a three-dimensional printed scaffold in a rat cranial defectoa mark
  • Kwon, Doo Yeon ;
  • Park, Ji Hoon ;
  • Jang, So Hee ;
  • Park, Joon Yeong ;
  • Jang, Ju Woong ;
  • Min, Byoung Hyun ;
  • Kim, Wan Doo ;
  • Lee, Hai Bang ;
  • Lee, Junhee ;
  • Kim, Moon Suk
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25

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Publication Year
2018-02-01
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Citation
Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine, Vol.12, pp.516-528
Keyword
3D printingbone regenerationimaginginkneo-bone formationprinted scaffold
Mesh Keyword
3-D printing3D-printingBioactivesBone defectBone formationBone regenerationNeo-bone formationPoly (l-lactide)Printed scaffoldTri-calcium phosphatesAnimalsBone RegenerationCell AdhesionCell Line, TumorCell ProliferationFluorescenceHumansOsteogenesisPolyestersPrinting, Three-DimensionalRats, Sprague-DawleyReproducibility of ResultsSkullTissue EngineeringTissue ScaffoldsX-Ray Microtomography
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Medicine (miscellaneous)BiomaterialsBiomedical Engineering
Abstract
Recently, computer-designed three-dimensional (3D) printing techniques have emerged as an active research area with almost unlimited possibilities. In this study, we used a computer-designed 3D scaffold to drive new bone formation in a bone defect. Poly-L-lactide (PLLA) and bioactive β-tricalcium phosphate (TCP) were simply mixed to prepare ink. PLLA + TCP showed good printability from the micronozzle and solidification within few seconds, indicating that it was indeed printable ink for layer-by-layer printing. In the images, TCP on the surface of (and/or inside) PLLA in the printed PLLA + TCP scaffold looked dispersed. MG-63 cells (human osteoblastoma) adhered to and proliferated well on the printed PLLA + TCP scaffold. To assess new bone formation in vivo, the printed PLLA + TCP scaffold was implanted into a full-thickness cranial bone defect in rats. The new bone formation was monitored by microcomputed tomography and histological analysis of the in vivo PLLA + TCP scaffold with or without MG-63 cells. The bone defect was gradually spontaneously replaced with new bone tissues when we used both bioactive TCP and MG-63 cells in the PLLA scaffold. Bone formation driven by the PLLA + TCP30 scaffold with MG-63 cells was significantly greater than that in other experimental groups. Furthermore, the PLLA + TCP scaffold gradually degraded and matched well the extent of the gradual new bone formation on microcomputed tomography. In conclusion, the printed PLLA + TCP scaffold effectively supports new bone formation in a cranial bone defect.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/30102
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/term.2532
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
National Research Foundation of Korea, Grant/Award Number: 2016R1A2B3007448 and 2010‐0028294; Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, Grant/Award Number: 10038665 and 10038666This study was supported by a grant from Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (grants 10038665 and 10038666), a Basic Science Research Program (2016R1A2B3007448 and 2010‐0028294) through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF).
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Kim, Moon Suk김문석
Department of Applied Chemistry & Biological Engineering
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