Kozin Elliott D, Black Nicole L, Cheng Jeffrey T, Cotler Max J, McKenna Michael J, Lee Daniel J, Lewis Jennifer A, Rosowski John J, Remenschneider Aaron K
Department Otolaryngology, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA, USA; Eaton Peabody Laboratories, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA; Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Hear Res. 2016 Oct;340:191-203. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2016.03.005. Epub 2016 Mar 16.
The tympanic membrane (TM) is an exquisite structure that captures and transmits sound from the environment to the ossicular chain of the middle ear. The creation of TM grafts by multi-material three-dimensional (3D) printing may overcome limitations of current graft materials, e.g. temporalis muscle fascia, used for surgical reconstruction of the TM. TM graft scaffolds with either 8 or 16 circumferential and radial filament arrangements were fabricated by 3D printing of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), flex-polyactic acid (PLA) and polycaprolactone (PCL) materials followed by uniform infilling with a fibrin-collagen composite hydrogel. Digital opto-electronic holography (DOEH) and laser Doppler vibrometry (LDV) were used to measure acoustic properties including surface motions and velocity of TM grafts in response to sound. Mechanical properties were determined using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). Results were compared to fresh cadaveric human TMs and cadaveric temporalis fascia. Similar to the human TM, TM grafts exhibit simple surface motion patterns at lower frequencies (400 Hz), with a limited number of displacement maxima. At higher frequencies (>1000 Hz), their displacement patterns are highly organized with multiple areas of maximal displacement separated by regions of minimal displacement. By contrast, temporalis fascia exhibited asymmetric and less regular holographic patterns. Velocity across frequency sweeps (0.2-10 kHz) measured by LDV demonstrated consistent results for 3D printed grafts, while velocity for human fascia varied greatly between specimens. TM composite grafts of different scaffold print materials and varied filament count (8 or 16) displayed minimal, but measurable differences in DOEH and LDV at tested frequencies. TM graft mechanical load increased with higher filament count and is resilient over time, which differs from temporalis fascia, which loses over 70% of its load bearing properties during mechanical testing. This study demonstrates the design, fabrication and preliminary in vitro acoustic and mechanical evaluation of 3D printed TM grafts. Data illustrate the feasibility of creating TM grafts with acoustic properties that reflect sound induced motion patterns of the human TM; furthermore, 3D printed grafts have mechanical properties that demonstrate increased resistance to deformation compared to temporalis fascia.
鼓膜(TM)是一种精妙的结构,它能捕捉来自外界的声音并将其传递至中耳的听骨链。通过多材料三维(3D)打印制作鼓膜移植物,可能会克服当前用于鼓膜手术重建的移植物材料(如颞肌筋膜)的局限性。采用聚二甲基硅氧烷(PDMS)、柔性聚乳酸(PLA)和聚己内酯(PCL)材料进行3D打印,制作出具有8或16个圆周和径向细丝排列的鼓膜移植物支架,随后用纤维蛋白 - 胶原蛋白复合水凝胶进行均匀填充。使用数字光电全息术(DOEH)和激光多普勒振动测量法(LDV)来测量声学特性,包括鼓膜移植物响应声音时的表面运动和速度。使用动态力学分析(DMA)来确定力学性能。将结果与新鲜的尸体人鼓膜和尸体颞肌筋膜进行比较。与人类鼓膜相似,鼓膜移植物在较低频率(400Hz)时表现出简单的表面运动模式,位移最大值数量有限。在较高频率(>1000Hz)时,它们的位移模式高度有序,多个最大位移区域被最小位移区域隔开。相比之下,颞肌筋膜表现出不对称且不太规则的全息图案。通过LDV测量的频率扫描(0.2 - 10kHz)速度显示,3D打印移植物的结果一致,而人筋膜的速度在不同标本之间差异很大。不同支架打印材料和不同细丝数量(8或16)的鼓膜复合移植物在测试频率下,在DOEH和LDV方面显示出最小但可测量的差异。鼓膜移植物的机械负荷随着细丝数量的增加而增加,并且随时间具有弹性,这与颞肌筋膜不同,颞肌筋膜在力学测试中会失去超过70%的承载性能。本研究展示了3D打印鼓膜移植物的设计、制作以及初步的体外声学和力学评估。数据说明了制作具有反映人类鼓膜声音诱导运动模式声学特性的鼓膜移植物的可行性;此外,3D打印移植物的力学性能表明,与颞肌筋膜相比,其抗变形能力增强。