AI Article Synopsis

  • 3D printing is crucial for creating composite hydrogel scaffolds that mimic bone structure and support bone regeneration using hybrid nanoparticles.
  • The research focused on optimizing the 3D printing process to develop a biopolymeric ink made of gelatin, polyvinyl alcohol, and hyaluronic acid, which was used to create core/shell scaffolds reinforced with bioactive nanoparticles.
  • The resulting scaffolds showed excellent properties like controlled swelling, structural integrity, and biocompatibility, and successfully promoted bone healing in a rabbit model, indicating their potential for treating bone defects.

Article Abstract

The versatility of 3D printing has rendered it an indispensable tool for the fabrication of composite hydrogel scaffolds, offering bone biomimetic features through inorganic and biopolymeric components as promising platforms for osteoregeneration. In this work, extrusion-based 3D printing was employed for the realization of osteoconductive composite biopolymer-based hydrogel scaffolds reinforced with hybrid bioactive hydroxyapatite/polycaprolactone nanoparticles (HAp/PCL NPs) for osteoregeneration. The printing technique was optimized for ink printability and viscosity and crosslinking parameters, where a biopolymeric blend of gelatin, polyvinyl alcohol and hyaluronic acid was developed as innovative plain polymeric ink (PPI). Scaffolds were fabricated by 3D printing adopting a biphasic core/shell geometry, where the core phase of the scaffolds was reinforced with HAp/PCL NPs; the scaffolds were then freeze-dried. Novel composite freeze-dried, loaded-core scaffolds, HAp/PCL NPs-LCS-FD exhibited controlled swelling and maintained structural integrity for 28 days. The developed HAp/PCL NPs-LCS-FD also demonstrated double-ranged pore size, interconnected porosity and efficient mechanical stiffness and strength, favorable for osteoconductive actions. Cell infiltration studies, computed tomography and histomorphometry demonstrated that HAp/PCL NPs-LCS-FD afforded osteoconduction, biodegradation, biocompatibility and bone healing in rabbit tibial model, acting as a template for new bone formation. Our findings suggest that HAp/PCL NPs-LCS-FD could offer prominent bone regeneration and could be involved in various bone defects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1bm00062dDOI Listing

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