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      Accelerated degradation of HAP/PLLA bone scaffold by PGA blending facilitates bioactivity and osteoconductivity

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          Abstract

          The incorporation of hydroxyapatite (HAP) into poly- l-lactic acid (PLLA) matrix serving as bone scaffold is expected to exhibit bioactivity and osteoconductivity to those of the living bone. While too low degradation rate of HAP/PLLA scaffold hinders the activity because the embedded HAP in the PLLA matrix is difficult to contact and exchange ions with body fluid. In this study, biodegradable polymer poly (glycolic acid) (PGA) was blended into the HAP/PLLA scaffold fabricated by laser 3D printing to accelerate the degradation. The results indicated that the incorporation of PGA enhanced the degradation rate of scaffold as indicated by the weight loss increasing from 3.3% to 25.0% after immersion for 28 days, owing to the degradation of high hydrophilic PGA and the subsequent accelerated hydrolysis of PLLA chains. Moreover, a lot of pores produced by the degradation of the scaffold promoted the exposure of HAP from the matrix, which not only activated the deposition of bone like apatite on scaffold but also accelerated apatite growth. Cytocompatibility tests exhibited a good osteoblast adhesion, spreading and proliferation, suggesting the scaffold provided a suitable environment for cell cultivation. Furthermore, the scaffold displayed excellent bone defect repair capacity with the formation of abundant new bone tissue and blood vessel tissue, and both ends of defect region were bridged after 8 weeks of implantation.

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          Highlights

          • PGA was blended into HAP/PLLA scaffold fabricated by laser 3D printing to accelerate degradation.

          • A lot of pores produced by scaffold degradation promoted the exposure of HAP from the matrix.

          • Scaffold provided a suitable environment for cell cultivation.

          • Scaffold displayed excellent bone repair capacity with the formation of abundant new bone tissue and blood vessel tissue.

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          3D printing of bone tissue engineering scaffolds

          Tissue engineering is promising in realizing successful treatments of human body tissue loss that current methods cannot treat well or achieve satisfactory clinical outcomes. In scaffold-based bone tissue engineering, a high performance scaffold underpins the success of a bone tissue engineering strategy and a major direction in the field is to produce bone tissue engineering scaffolds with desirable shape, structural, physical, chemical and biological features for enhanced biological performance and for regenerating complex bone tissues. Three-dimensional (3D) printing can produce customized scaffolds that are highly desirable for bone tissue engineering. The enormous interest in 3D printing and 3D printed objects by the science, engineering and medical communities has led to various developments of the 3D printing technology and wide investigations of 3D printed products in many industries, including biomedical engineering, over the past decade. It is now possible to create novel bone tissue engineering scaffolds with customized shape, architecture, favorable macro-micro structure, wettability, mechanical strength and cellular responses. This article provides a concise review of recent advances in the R & D of 3D printing of bone tissue engineering scaffolds. It also presents our philosophy and research in the designing and fabrication of bone tissue engineering scaffolds through 3D printing.
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            Print Me An Organ! Why We Are Not There Yet

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              A strawberry-like Ag-decorated barium titanate enhances piezoelectric and antibacterial activities of polymer scaffold

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Bioact Mater
                Bioact Mater
                Bioactive Materials
                KeAi Publishing
                2452-199X
                10 September 2020
                February 2021
                10 September 2020
                : 6
                : 2
                : 490-502
                Affiliations
                [a ]State Key Laboratory of High Performance Complex Manufacturing, College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, Central South University, Changsha, 410083, China
                [b ]Institute of Bioadditive Manufacturing, Jiangxi University of Science and Technology, Nanchang, 330013, China
                [c ]Shenzhen Institute of Information Technology, Shenzhen, 518172, China
                [d ]NHC Key Laboratory of Carcinogenesis, School of Basic Medical Science, Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, 410013, China
                [e ]School of Energy and Machinery Engineering, Jiangxi University of Science and Technology, Nanchang, 330013, China
                [f ]Department of Periodontics & Oral Mucosal Section, Xiangya Stomatological Hospital, Central South University, Changsha, 410013, China
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. fengpei@ 123456csu.edu.cn
                Article
                S2452-199X(20)30202-4
                10.1016/j.bioactmat.2020.09.001
                7493133
                32995675
                8d2ea06f-e016-4bf1-92b1-41d0450ba544
                © 2020 [The Author/The Authors]

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 6 June 2020
                : 29 August 2020
                : 1 September 2020
                Categories
                Article

                pga,hap/plla,scaffold,degradation,bone regeneration
                pga, hap/plla, scaffold, degradation, bone regeneration

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