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Yarn design for functional tissue engineering. | LitMetric

Yarn design for functional tissue engineering.

J Biomech

Biomedical Engineering Department, Tufts University, 4 Colby St., Room 153, Medford, MA 02155, USA.

Published: November 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • Tissue engineering scaffolds need to mimic the mechanical properties of natural tissues, and B. mori silk yarns are explored for this purpose.
  • Different textile methods like plying, twisting, braiding, and cabling create variations in the scaffolds' mechanical properties, such as tensile strength and stiffness.
  • While braids are popular, they have limitations in stiffness changes, whereas cabled yarns offer better flexibility in mechanical outcomes, and twisted yarns are more economical but stiffer and less elastic compared to cabled options.

Article Abstract

Tissue engineering requires the ability to design scaffolds with mechanical properties similar to those of the native tissue. Here, B. mori silk yarns are used as a model system to demonstrate the potential benefits and drawbacks of several textile methods used to fabricate tissue engineering scaffolds. Fibers are plied, twisted, cabled, braided, and/or textured to form several geometries with a wide range of mechanical outcomes. Predictable changes in ultimate tensile strength and stiffness are demonstrated following processing and as a function of test environment. The mechanical effects of increasing turns per inch and combining groups of fibers into higher-order yarn structures are demonstrated. Braids, one of the most commonly used textile structures, are shown to be limited by a change in stiffness following the locking-angle and therefore, potentially not the ideal structure for tissue engineering. Cabled yarns appear to allow the most flexibility in mechanical outcomes with a highly organized geometry. Twisted yarns, while more economical than cabled yarns, result in a higher stiffness and lower percent elongation at break than cabled yarns.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2005.07.007DOI Listing

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