Sears Nicholas, Dhavalikar Prachi, Whitely Michael, Cosgriff-Hernandez Elizabeth
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Texas A&M University College Station, Texas, 77843-3120, United States of America.
Biofabrication. 2017 May 22;9(2):025020. doi: 10.1088/1758-5090/aa7077.
Extrusion deposition is a versatile method for the 3D printing of biomaterials such as hydrogels, ceramics, and suspensions. Recently, a new class of emulsion inks were developed that can be used to create tunable, hierarchically porous materials with a cure-on-dispense method. Propylene fumarate dimethacrylate (PFDMA) was selected to fabricate bone grafts using this technology due to its established biocompatibility, osteoconductivity, and good compressive properties. Scaffolds fabricated from PFDMA emulsion inks displayed compressive modulus and yield strength of approximately 15 and 1 MPa, respectively. A decrease in infill (from 100% to 70%) resulted in a six-fold increase in permeability; however, there was also a corollary decrease in mechanical properties. In order to generate scaffolds with increased permeability without sacrificing mechanical strength, a biomimetic approach to scaffold design was used to reinforce the highly porous emulsion inks with a dense cortical shell of thermoplastic polyester. Herein, we present an open source method for printing multi-material bone grafts based on PFDMA polyHIPEs with hierarchical porosity and reinforced with a dense shell of poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) or poly(lactic acid) (PLA). A multi-modal printing setup was first developed that combined paste extrusion and high temperature thermoplastic extrusion with high positional accuracy in dual deposition. Scaffolds printed with a PCL shell displayed compressive modulus and yield strength of approximately 30 and 3 MPa, respectively. Scaffolds printed with a PLA shell showed compressive modulus and yield strength of approximately 100 and 10 MPa, respectively. By combining this new paste extrusion of emulsion inks with traditional thermoplastic extrusion printing, we have created scaffolds with superior strength that promote cell viability and proliferation of human mesenchymal stem cells. The development of this technique shows great promise for the fabrication of a myriad of other complex tissue engineered scaffolds.
挤出沉积是一种用于3D打印水凝胶、陶瓷和悬浮液等生物材料的通用方法。最近,开发了一类新型乳液油墨,可用于通过按需固化方法创建可调谐的、具有分级孔隙结构的材料。由于其已确立的生物相容性、骨传导性和良好的压缩性能,选择富马酸丙酯二甲基丙烯酸酯(PFDMA)使用该技术制造骨移植物。由PFDMA乳液油墨制造的支架分别显示出约15MPa和1MPa的压缩模量和屈服强度。填充率降低(从100%降至70%)导致渗透率增加了六倍;然而,机械性能也相应下降。为了在不牺牲机械强度的情况下生成具有更高渗透率的支架,采用了一种仿生支架设计方法,用热塑性聚酯的致密皮质壳增强高度多孔的乳液油墨。在此,我们提出了一种基于具有分级孔隙结构并由聚(ε-己内酯)(PCL)或聚乳酸(PLA)致密壳增强的PFDMA聚HIPE打印多材料骨移植物的开源方法。首先开发了一种多模态打印设置,该设置将糊剂挤出和高温热塑性挤出相结合,在双沉积中具有高精度的定位。用PCL壳打印的支架分别显示出约30MPa和3MPa的压缩模量和屈服强度。用PLA壳打印的支架分别显示出约100MPa和10MPa的压缩模量和屈服强度。通过将这种新型乳液油墨的糊剂挤出与传统热塑性挤出打印相结合,我们创建了具有卓越强度的支架,可促进人间充质干细胞的细胞活力和增殖。这项技术的发展为制造无数其他复杂的组织工程支架显示出巨大的前景。