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      Prevascularized hydrogels with mature vascular networks promote the regeneration of critical‐size calvarial bone defects in vivo

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          Bone regeneration: current concepts and future directions

          Bone regeneration is a complex, well-orchestrated physiological process of bone formation, which can be seen during normal fracture healing, and is involved in continuous remodelling throughout adult life. However, there are complex clinical conditions in which bone regeneration is required in large quantity, such as for skeletal reconstruction of large bone defects created by trauma, infection, tumour resection and skeletal abnormalities, or cases in which the regenerative process is compromised, including avascular necrosis, atrophic non-unions and osteoporosis. Currently, there is a plethora of different strategies to augment the impaired or 'insufficient' bone-regeneration process, including the 'gold standard' autologous bone graft, free fibula vascularised graft, allograft implantation, and use of growth factors, osteoconductive scaffolds, osteoprogenitor cells and distraction osteogenesis. Improved 'local' strategies in terms of tissue engineering and gene therapy, or even 'systemic' enhancement of bone repair, are under intense investigation, in an effort to overcome the limitations of the current methods, to produce bone-graft substitutes with biomechanical properties that are as identical to normal bone as possible, to accelerate the overall regeneration process, or even to address systemic conditions, such as skeletal disorders and osteoporosis.
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            Rapid casting of patterned vascular networks for perfusable engineered 3D tissues

            In the absence of perfusable vascular networks, three-dimensional (3D) engineered tissues densely populated with cells quickly develop a necrotic core [1]. Yet the lack of a general approach to rapidly construct such networks remains a major challenge for 3D tissue culture [2–4]. Here, we 3D printed rigid filament networks of carbohydrate glass, and used them as a cytocompatible sacrificial template in engineered tissues containing living cells to generate cylindrical networks which could be lined with endothelial cells and perfused with blood under high-pressure pulsatile flow. Because this simple vascular casting approach allows independent control of network geometry, endothelialization, and extravascular tissue, it is compatible with a wide variety of cell types, synthetic and natural extracellular matrices (ECMs), and crosslinking strategies. We also demonstrated that the perfused vascular channels sustained the metabolic function of primary rat hepatocytes in engineered tissue constructs that otherwise exhibited suppressed function in their core.
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              BoneJ: Free and extensible bone image analysis in ImageJ.

              Bone geometry is commonly measured on computed tomographic (CT) and X-ray microtomographic (μCT) images. We obtained hundreds of CT, μCT and synchrotron μCT images of bones from diverse species that needed to be analysed remote from scanning hardware, but found that available software solutions were expensive, inflexible or methodologically opaque. We implemented standard bone measurements in a novel ImageJ plugin, BoneJ, with which we analysed trabecular bone, whole bones and osteocyte lacunae. BoneJ is open source and free for anyone to download, use, modify and distribute. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
                J Tissue Eng Regen Med
                Wiley
                1932-6254
                1932-7005
                March 2021
                February 05 2021
                March 2021
                : 15
                : 3
                : 219-231
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Division of Biomaterials and Biomechanics Department of Restorative Dentistry School of Dentistry Oregon Health and Science University Portland Oregon USA
                [2 ]Center for Regenerative Medicine Oregon Health and Science University Portland Oregon USA
                [3 ]Department of Biomedical Engineering Oregon Health and Science University Portland Oregon USA
                [4 ]Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research (CEDAR) Center Knight Cancer Institute Oregon Health and Science University Portland Oregon USA
                Article
                10.1002/term.3166
                c3163aee-68b9-411c-a9c2-276f910e6576
                © 2021

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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