Materials science & engineering. C, Materials for biological applications | 2021

Design and development of a reinforced tubular electrospun construct for the repair of ruptures of deep flexor tendons.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


This research aims at developing a more potent solution for deep flexor tendon repair by combining a mechanical and biological approach. A reinforced, multi-layered electrospun tubular construct is developed, composed of three layers: an inner electrospun layer containing an anti-inflammatory component (Naproxen), a middle layer of braided monofilament as reinforcement and an outer electrospun layer containing an anti-adhesion component (hyaluronic acid, HA). In a first step, a novel acrylate endcapped urethane-based precursor (AUP) is developed and characterized by measuring molar mass, acrylate content and thermo-stability. The AUP material is benchmarked against commercially available poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL). Next, the materials are processed into multi-layered, tubular constructs with bio-active components (Naproxen and HA) using electrospinning. In vitro assays using human fibroblasts show that incorporation of the bio-active components is successful and not-cytotoxic. Moreover, tensile testing using ex vivo sheep tendons prove that the developed multi-layered constructs fulfill the required strength for tendon repair (i.e. 2.79-3.98\u202fMPa), with an ultimate strength of 8.56\u202f±\u202f1.92\u202fMPa and 8.36\u202f±\u202f0.57\u202fMPa for PCL and AUP/PCL constructs respectively. In conclusion, by combining a mechanical approach (improved mechanical properties) with the incorporation of bio-active compounds (biological approach), this solution shows its potential for application in deep flexor tendon repair.

Volume 119
Pages \n 111504\n
DOI 10.1016/J.MSEC.2020.111504
Language English
Journal Materials science & engineering. C, Materials for biological applications

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