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Dive into the research topics where Antonio J. Guerra is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio J. Guerra.


Materials | 2018

Design of a Scaffold Parameter Selection System with Additive Manufacturing for a Biomedical Cell Culture

Marc Rabionet; Emma Polonio; Antonio J. Guerra; Jessica Martin; Teresa Puig; Joaquim Ciurana

Open-source 3D printers mean objects can be quickly and efficiently produced. However, design and fabrication parameters need to be optimized to set up the correct printing procedure; a procedure in which the characteristics of the printing materials selected for use can also influence the process. This work focuses on optimizing the printing process of the open-source 3D extruder machine RepRap, which is used to manufacture poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) scaffolds for cell culture applications. PCL is a biocompatible polymer that is free of toxic dye and has been used to fabricate scaffolds, i.e., solid structures suitable for 3D cancer cell cultures. Scaffold cell culture has been described as enhancing cancer stem cell (CSC) populations related to tumor chemoresistance and/or their recurrence after chemotherapy. A RepRap BCN3D+ printer and 3 mm PCL wire were used to fabricate circular scaffolds. Design and fabrication parameters were first determined with SolidWorks and Slic3r software and subsequently optimized following a novel sequential flowchart. In the flowchart described here, the parameters were gradually optimized step by step, by taking several measurable variables of the resulting scaffolds into consideration to guarantee high-quality printing. Three deposition angles (45°, 60° and 90°) were fabricated and tested. MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells and NIH/3T3 murine fibroblasts were used to assess scaffold adequacy for 3D cell cultures. The 60° scaffolds were found to be suitable for the purpose. Therefore, PCL scaffolds fabricated via the flowchart optimization with a RepRap 3D printer could be used for 3D cell cultures and may boost CSCs to study new therapeutic treatments for this malignant population. Moreover, the flowchart defined here could represent a standard procedure for non-engineers (i.e., mainly physicians) when manufacturing new culture systems is required.


Materials | 2018

3D-Printed PCL/PLA Composite Stents: Towards a New Solution to Cardiovascular Problems

Antonio J. Guerra; Paula Cano; Marc Rabionet; Teresa Puig; Joaquim Ciurana

Biodegradable stents (BRS) offer enormous potential but first they must meet five specific requirements: (i) their manufacturing process must be precise; (ii) degradation should have minimal toxicity; (iii) the rate of degradation should match the recovery rate of vascular tissue; (iv) ideally, they should induce rapid endothelialization to restore the functions of vascular tissue, but at the same time reduce the risk of restenosis; and (v) their mechanical behavior should comply with medical requirements, namely, the flexibility required to facilitate placement but also sufficient radial rigidity to support the vessel. Although the first three requirements have been comprehensively studied, the last two have been overlooked. One possible way of addressing these issues would be to fabricate composite stents using materials that have different mechanical, biological, or medical properties, for instance, Polylactide Acid (PLA) or Polycaprolactone (PCL). However, fashioning such stents using the traditional stent manufacturing process known as laser cutting would be impossible. Our work, therefore, aims to produce PCL/PLA composite stents using a novel 3D tubular printer based on Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM). The cell geometry (shape and area) and the materials (PCL and PLA) of the stents were analyzed and correlated with 3T3 cell proliferation, degradation rates, dynamic mechanical and radial expansion tests to determine the best parameters for a stent that will satisfy the five strict BRS requirements. Results proved that the 3D-printing process was highly suitable for producing composite stents (approximately 85–95% accuracy). Both PCL and PLA demonstrated their biocompatibility with PCL stents presenting an average cell proliferation of 12.46% and PLA 8.28% after only 3 days. Furthermore, the PCL/PLA composite stents demonstrated their potential in degradation, dynamic mechanical and expansion tests. Moreover, and regardless of the order of the layers, the composite stents showed (virtually) medium levels of degradation rates and mechanical modulus. Radially, they exhibited the virtues of PCL in the expansion step (elasticity) and those of PLA in the recoil step (rigidity). Results have clearly demonstrated that composite PCL/PLA stents are a highly promising solution to fulfilling the rigorous BRS requirements.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018

Screening of Additive Manufactured Scaffolds Designs for Triple Negative Breast Cancer 3D Cell Culture and Stem-Like Expansion

Emma Polonio-Alcalá; Marc Rabionet; Antonio J. Guerra; Marc Yeste; Joaquim Ciurana; Teresa Puig

Breast cancer stem cells (BCSCs) are tumor-initiating cells responsible for metastasis and tumor reappearance, but their research is limited by the impossibility to cultivate them in a monolayer culture. Scaffolds are three-dimensional (3D) cell culture systems which avoid problems related with culturing BCSC. However, a standardized scaffold for enhancing a BCSC population is still an open issue. The main aim of this study is to establish a suitable poly (lactic acid) (PLA) scaffold which will produce BCSC enrichment, thus allowing them to be studied. Different 3D printing parameters were analyzed using Taguchi experimental design methods. Several PLA scaffold architectures were manufactured using a Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) 3D printer. They were then evaluated by cell proliferation assay and the configurations with the highest growth rates were subjected to BCSC quantification by ALDH activity. The design SS1 (0.2 mm layer height, 70% infill density, Zigzag infill pattern, 45° infill direction, and 100% flow) obtained the highest proliferation rate and was capable of enhancing a ALDH+ cell population compared to 2D cell culture. In conclusion, the data obtained endorse the PLA porous scaffold as useful for culturing breast cancer cells in a microenvironment similar to in vivo and increasing the numbers of BCSCs.


Optics and Laser Technology | 2017

Fibre laser cutting of polycaprolactone sheet for stents manufacturing: a feasibility study

Antonio J. Guerra; J. Farjas; Joaquim Ciurana


Polymer Degradation and Stability | 2017

Effect of fibre laser process on in-vitro degradation rate of a polycaprolactone stent a novel degradation study method

Antonio J. Guerra; Joaquim Ciurana


Materials & Design | 2018

3D-printed bioabsordable polycaprolactone stent: The effect of process parameters on its physical features

Antonio J. Guerra; Joaquim Ciurana


Polymers for Advanced Technologies | 2018

Effects of different sterilization processes on the properties of a novel 3D-printed polycaprolactone stent

Antonio J. Guerra; Paula Cano; Marc Rabionet; Teresa Puig; Joaquim Ciurana


Procedia CIRP | 2017

Fabrication of PCL/PLA Composite Tube for Stent Manufacturing

Antonio J. Guerra; Joan San; Joaquim Ciurana


Procedia Manufacturing | 2017

A novel 3D additive manufacturing machine to biodegradable stents

Antonio J. Guerra; A. Roca; J. de Ciurana


Procedia CIRP | 2018

3D-printed Tubular Scaffolds for Vascular Tissue Engineering

Marc Rabionet; Antonio J. Guerra; Teresa Puig; Joaquim Ciurana

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A. Roca

University of Girona

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Joan San

University of Girona

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