Title of article :
Manufacture of porous polymer nerve conduits by a novel low-pressure injection molding process
Author/Authors :
Cathryn Sundback، نويسنده , , Tessa Hadlock، نويسنده , , Mack Cheney، نويسنده , , Joseph Vacanti، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
A method to fabricate porous, biodegradable conduits using a combined injection molding, thermally induced phase transition technique was developed which produced conduits with dimensionally toleranced, longitudinally aligned channels. The geometry of the channels was designed to approximate the architecture of peripheral nerves and to support the monolayer adherence of physiologically relevant numbers of Schwann cells. The channel configuration could be varied from a single 1.35 mm diameter channel up to 100 0.08 mm diameter channels. A conduit with 100 channels has approximately 12.5 times the lumenal surface area of a single channel conduit and supports the adherence of five times the number of Schwann cells in the native peripheral nerve. In this study, poly( -lactide-co-glycolide) ( -PLGA) was dissolved in acetic acid and injected into a cold mold which induced solid–liquid phase separation and, ultimately, solidification of the polymer solution. The acetic acid was removed by sublimation and the resulting foam had a macrostructure of high anisotropy. Semi-permeable skins formed on the outer and lumen diameters of the conduit as a consequence of rapid quenching. Macropores were organized into bundles of channels, up to 20 μm wide, in the -PLGA matrix and represented remnants of acetic acid that crystallized during solidification.
Keywords :
Peripheral nerve regeneration , Polymer processing , Nerve conduit , Biodegradable polymer , Schwann cells , Tissue engineering
Journal title :
Biomaterials
Journal title :
Biomaterials