Publications by authors named "Sonia Abbasi Ravasjani"

Bioreactor systems, for example, spinner flask and perfusion bioreactors, and cell-seeded three-dimensional (3D)-printed scaffolds are used in bone tissue engineering strategies to stimulate cells and produce bone tissue suitable for implantation into the patient. The construction of functional and clinically relevant bone graft using cell-seeded 3D-printed scaffolds within bioreactor systems is still a challenge. Bioreactor parameters, for example, fluid shear stress and nutrient transport, will crucially affect cell function on 3D-printed scaffolds.

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Background: Nitric oxide is a chemical agent produced by endothelial cells in a healthy blood vessel, inhibiting the overgrowth of vascular smooth muscle cells and regulating vessel tone. Liposomes are biocompatible and biodegradable drug carriers with a similar structure to cell bilayer phospholipid membrane that can be used as useful nitric oxide carriers in vascular grafts.

Method: Using a custom-designed apparatus, the sheep carotid arteries were decellularized while still maintaining important components of the vascular extracellular matrix (ECM), allowing them to be used as small-diameter vascular grafts.

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The lack of bioactivity in three-dimensional (3D)-printing of poly-є-caprolactone (PCL) scaffolds limits cell-material interactions in bone tissue engineering. This constraint can be overcome by surface-functionalization using glycosaminoglycan-like anionic polysaccharides, e.g.

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A challenging approach of three-dimensional (3D)-biomimetic scaffold design for bone tissue engineering is to improve scaffold bioactivity and mechanical properties. We aimed to design and fabricate 3D-polycaprolactone (PCL)-based nanocomposite scaffold containing a high concentration homogeneously distributed carbonated-nanohydroxyapatite (C-nHA)-particles in combination with immobilized-collagen to mimic real bone properties. PCL-scaffolds without/with C-nHA at 30%, 45%, and 60% (wt/wt) were 3D-printed.

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Synergistic promotion of angiogenesis and osteogenesis in bone tissue-engineered constructs remains a crucial clinical challenge, which might be overcome by simultaneous employment of superior techniques including coculture systems, differentiation-stimulated factors, combinatorial scaffolds and bioreactors.Current study investigated the effect of flow perfusion along with coculture of human adipose stem cells (hASCs) and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) on osteogenic and angiogenic differentiation.Pre-treated hASCs with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D were seeded onto poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)/β-tricalcium phosphate/polycaprolactone (PLGA/β-TCP/PCL) scaffold with/without HUVECs, and cultured for 14 days within a flask or modified perfusion bioreactor.

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Fluid flow dynamics and oxygen-concentration in 3D-printed scaffolds within perfusion bioreactors are sensitive to controllable bioreactor parameters such as inlet flow rate. Here we aimed to determine fluid flow dynamics, oxygen-concentration, and cell proliferation and distribution in 3D-printed scaffolds as a result of different inlet flow rates of perfusion bioreactors using experiments and finite element modeling. Pre-osteoblasts were treated with 1 h pulsating fluid flow with low (0.

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