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Dive into the research topics where Ioannis V. Yannas is active.

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Featured researches published by Ioannis V. Yannas.


Annals of Surgery | 1981

Successful use of a physiologically acceptable artificial skin in the treatment of extensive burn injury.

John F. Burke; Ioannis V. Yannas; William C. Quinby; Conrado C. Bondoc; Walter K. Jung

A bilayer artificial skin composed of a temporary Silastic epidermis and a porous collagcn-chondroitin 6-sulfate fibrillar dermis, which is not removed, has been used to physiologically close up to 60% of the body surface following prompt excision of burn wounds in ten patients whose total burn size covered 50–95% body surface area (BSA). Following grafting, the dermal portion is populated with fibroblasts and vessels from the wound bed. The anatomic structure of the artificial dermis resembles normal dermis and serves as a template for the synthesis of new connective tissue and the formation of a “neodermis,” while it is slowly biodegraded. This artificial skin has physiologically closed excised burn wounds for periods of time up to 46 days before the Silastic epidermis was removed. At the time of election when donor sites are ready for reharvesting, the Silastic epidermis is removed from the vascularized artificial dermis and replaced with 0.004 auto-epidermal graft in sheet or meshed form. Clinical and histologic experience in a relatively short follow-up period (2–16 months) indicates that “neodermis” retains some of the anatomic characteristics and behavior of normal dermis, thus promising improvement in the functional and cosmetic results, as well as providing physiologic function as a skin substitute. The artificial skin is easily sterilized and stored at room temperature, capable of large scale production, and immediately available for grafting, indicating its potential for easy and relatively economic use in the burn patient


Biomaterials | 2004

Influence of freezing rate on pore structure in freeze-dried collagen-GAG scaffolds.

Fergal J. O'Brien; Brendan A. Harley; Ioannis V. Yannas; Lorna J. Gibson

The cellular structure of collagen-glycosaminoglycan (CG) scaffolds used in tissue engineering must be designed to meet a number of constraints with respect to biocompatibility, degradability, pore size, pore structure, and specific surface area. The conventional freeze-drying process for fabricating CG scaffolds creates variable cooling rates throughout the scaffold during freezing, producing a heterogeneous matrix pore structure with a large variation in average pore diameter at different locations throughout the scaffold. In this study, the scaffold synthesis process was modified to produce more homogeneous freezing by controlling of the rate of freezing during fabrication and obtaining more uniform contact between the pan containing the CG suspension and the freezing shelf through the use of smaller, less warped pans. The modified fabrication technique has allowed production of CG scaffolds with a more homogeneous structure characterized by less variation in mean pore size throughout the scaffold (mean: 95.9 microm, CV: 0.128) compared to the original scaffold (mean: 132.4 microm, CV: 0.185). The pores produced using the new technique appear to be more equiaxed, compared with those in scaffolds produced using the original technique.


Progress in Materials Science | 2001

Cellular materials as porous scaffolds for tissue engineering

T.M. Freyman; Ioannis V. Yannas; Lorna J. Gibson

A major goal of tissue engineering is to synthesize or regenerate tissues and organs. Today, this is done by providing a synthetic porous scaffold, or matrix, which mimics the bodys own extracellular matrix, onto which cells attach, multiply, migrate and function. Porous scaffolds are currently being developed for regeneration of skin, cartilage, bone, nerve and liver. The microstructures of many porous scaffolds ressemble that of an engineering foam. In this paper, we describe the microstructural requirements for porous scaffolds, review several processes for making them and show typical microstructures. Clinical studies have found that a collagen-based scaffold for skin regeneration reduces wound contraction during the healing process, reducing scar formation. The process of wound contraction is not well understood. Here, we describe the measurement of contraction of collagen-based scaffolds by fibroblasts in vitro using a cell force monitor.


Biomaterials | 1997

Matrix collagen type and pore size influence behaviour of seeded canine chondrocytes

Stefan Nehrer; Howard A. Breinan; Arun J. Ramappa; Gretchen Young; Sonya Shortkroff; Libby K. Louie; Clement B. Sledge; Ioannis V. Yannas; Myron Spector

This study directly compared the behaviour of chondrocytes in porous matrices comprising different collagen types and different pore diameters. There was a dramatic difference in the morphology of the cells in the type I and type II collagen matrices. The cells in the type II collagen matrix retained their chondrocytic morphology and synthesized glycosaminoglycans, while in the type I matrix the chondrocytes displayed a fibroblastic morphology with less biosynthetic activity than those in the type II. Small pore diameter affected morphology initially in the type I matrices and showed a higher increase of DNA content, but with time the cells lost the chondrocytic morphology. Our results demonstrate the marked influence of collagen type and pore characteristics on the phenotypic expression of seeded chondrocytes.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1998

Tensional homeostasis in dermal fibroblasts: Mechanical responses to mechanical loading in three-dimensional substrates

Robert A. Brown; Rita T Prajapati; McGrouther Da; Ioannis V. Yannas; Mark Eastwood

Many soft connective tissues are under endogenous tension, and their resident cells generate considerable contractile forces on the extracellular matrix. The present work was aimed to determine quantitatively how fibroblasts, grown within three‐dimensional collagen lattices, respond mechanically to precisely defined tensional loads. Forces generated in response to changes in applied load were measured using a tensional culture force monitor. In a number of variant systems, resident cells consistently reacted to modify the endogenous matrix tension in the opposite direction to externally applied loads. That is, increased external loading was followed immediately by a reduction in cell‐mediated contraction whilst decreased external loading elicited increased contraction. Responses were cell‐mediated and not a result of material properties of the matrices. This is the first detailed characterisation of a tensional homeostatic response in cells. The maintained force, after 8 h in culture, was typically around 40–60 dynes/million cells. Maintenance of an active tensional homeostasis has widespread implications for cells in culture and forwhole tissue function. J. Cell. Physiol. 175:323–332, 1998.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research | 1997

Canine chondrocytes seeded in type I and type II collagen implants investigated In Vitro

Stefan Nehrer; Howard A. Breinan; Arun J. Ramappa; Sonya Shortkroff; Gretchen Young; Tom Minas; Clement B. Sledge; Ioannis V. Yannas; Myron Spector

Synthetic and natural absorbable polymers have been used as vehicles for implantation of cells into cartilage defects to promote regeneration of the articular joint surface. Implants should provide a pore structure that allows cell adhesion and growth, and not provoke inflammation or toxicity when implanted in vivo. The scaffold should be absorbable and the degradation should match the rate of tissue regeneration. To facilitate cartilage repair the chemical structure and pore architecture of the matrix should allow the seeded cells to maintain the chondrocytic phenotype, characterized by synthesis of cartilage-specific proteins. We investigated the behavior of canine chondrocytes in two spongelike matrices in vitro: a collagen-glycosaminoglycan (GAG) copolymer produced from bovine hide consisting of type I collagen and a porous scaffold made of type II collagen by extraction of porcine cartilage. Canine chondrocytes were seeded on both types of matrices and cultured for 3 h, 7 days, and 14 days. The histology of chondrocyte-seeded implants showed a significantly higher percentage of cells with spherical morphology, consistent with chondrocytic morphology, in the type II sponge at each time point. Pericellular matrix stained for proteoglycans and for type II collagen after 14 days. Biochemical analysis of the cell seeded sponges for GAG and DNA content showed increases with time. At day 14 there was a significantly higher amount of DNA and GAG in the type II matrix. This is the first study that directly compares the behavior of chondrocytes in type I and type II collagen matrices. The type II matrix may be of value as a vehicle for chondrocyte implantation on the basis of the higher percentage of chondrocytes retaining spherical morphology and greater biosynthetic activity that was reflected in the greater increase of GAG content.


Journal of Macromolecular Science-polymer Reviews | 1972

Collagen and Gelatin in the Solid State

Ioannis V. Yannas

Abstract Current physicochemical knowledge on the structure of collagen is based almost exclusively on dilute solution measurements or on results from x-ray diffraction studies and electron microscopy of native and reconstituted collagen fibers and fibrils. A comprehensive treatise of this subject has recently appeared [1]; this treatise demonstrates the depth of structural understanding that has been achieved by use of a methodology based largely on the state of infinite dilution, on one hand, and on condensed states of very high order, on the other.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Microarchitecture of Three-Dimensional Scaffolds Influences Cell Migration Behavior via Junction Interactions ☆

Brendan A. Harley; Hyung Do Kim; Muhammad H. Zaman; Ioannis V. Yannas; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Lorna J. Gibson

Cell migration plays a critical role in a wide variety of physiological and pathological phenomena as well as in scaffold-based tissue engineering. Cell migration behavior is known to be governed by biochemical stimuli and cellular interactions. Biophysical processes associated with interactions between the cell and its surrounding extracellular matrix may also play a significant role in regulating migration. Although biophysical properties of two-dimensional substrates have been shown to significantly influence cell migration, elucidating factors governing migration in a three-dimensional environment is a relatively new avenue of research. Here, we investigate the effect of the three-dimensional microstructure, specifically the pore size and Youngs modulus, of collagen-glycosaminoglycan scaffolds on the migratory behavior of individual mouse fibroblasts. We observe that the fibroblast migration, characterized by motile fraction as well as locomotion speed, decreases as scaffold pore size increases across a range from 90 to 150 mum. Directly testing the effects of varying strut Youngs modulus on cell motility showed a biphasic relationship between cell speed and strut modulus and also indicated that mechanical factors were not responsible for the observed effect of scaffold pore size on cell motility. Instead, in-depth analysis of cell locomotion paths revealed that the distribution of junction points between scaffold struts strongly modulates motility. Strut junction interactions affect local directional persistence as well as cell speed at and away from the junctions, providing a new biophysical mechanism for the governance of cell motility by the extracellular microstructure.


Experimental Neurology | 1998

Collagen-GAG substrate enhances the quality of nerve regeneration through collagen tubes up to level of autograft.

L.J. Chamberlain; Ioannis V. Yannas; H.-P. Hsu; Gary R. Strichartz; Myron Spector

Peripheral nerve regeneration was studied across a tubulated 10-mm gap in the rat sciatic nerve using histomorphometry and electrophysiological measurements of A-fiber, B-fiber, and C-fiber peaks of the evoked action potentials. Tubes fabricated from large-pore collagen (max. pore diameter, 22 nm), small-pore collagen (max. pore diameter, 4 nm), and silicone were implanted either saline-filled or filled with a highly porous, collagen-glycosaminoglycan (CG) matrix. The CG matrix was deliberately synthesized, based on a previous optimization study, to degrade with a half-life of about 6 weeks and to have a very high specific surface through a combination of high pore volume fraction (0.95) and relatively small average pore diameter (35 microm). Nerves regenerated through tubes fabricated from large-pore collagen and filled with the CG matrix had significantly more large-diameter axons, more total axons, and significantly higher A-fiber conduction velocities than any other tubulated group; and, although lower than normal, their histomorphometric and electrophysiological properties were statistically indistinguishable from those of the autograft control. Although the total number of myelinated axons in nerves regenerated by tubulation had reached a plateau by 30 weeks, the number of axons with diameter larger than 6 microm, which have been uniquely associated with the A-fiber peak of the action potential, continued to increase at substantial rates through the completion of the study (60 weeks). The kinetic data strongly suggest that a nerve trunk maturation process, not previously reported in studies of the tubulated 10-mm gap in the rat sciatic nerve, and consisting in increase of axonal tissue area with decrease in total tissue area, continues beyond 60 weeks after injury, resulting in a nerve trunk which increasingly approaches the structure of the normal control.


Biomaterials | 2001

Fibroblast contraction of a collagen–GAG matrix

T.M. Freyman; Ioannis V. Yannas; R. Yokoo; Lorna J. Gibson

Contractile cells, found in wounded or diseased tissues, are associated with the formation of scar tissue. The complexity of contraction in vivo has led to the development of models of contraction by cells in vitro. In this work, a device was developed which quantitatively measured the contractile force developed by fibroblasts seeded into a collagen-glycosaminoglycan porous matrix in vitro. This device differed from most of those previously described in that it directly transferred cellular contractile force to the force transducer (a cantilever beam) and that it used a porous matrix rather than a collagen gel. The data for the increase in contractile force with time were fit to a mathematical equation using two fitting parameters. Data were then compared using the fitting parameters and the cell density. A study of the effect of cell density on the contractile force resulted in a linearly proportional relationship. Subsequent normalization of force by cell density or number resulted in a value of contractile force per cell, 1 nN, that was independent of cell density. The time for the contractile force to develop was also independent of cell density. These results suggest that, in this system, cells develop contractile force individually, irrespective of the force generated by surrounding cells.

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Myron Spector

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Dennis P. Orgill

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Lorna J. Gibson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Peter T. C. So

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Dimitrios S. Tzeranis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chor Huang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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H.-P. Hsu

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Brendan Harley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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E. M. Skrabut

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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