0000000000235554

AUTHOR

Liam Burke

0000-0002-5153-5174

showing 2 related works from this author

Additive Manufacturing of Multi‐Scale Porous Soft Tissue Implants That Encourage Vascularization and Tissue Ingrowth

2021

Medical devices, such as silicone-based prostheses designed for soft tissue implantation, often induce a suboptimal foreign-body response which results in a hardened avascular fibrotic capsule around the device, often leading to patient discomfort or implant failure. Here, it is proposed that additive manufacturing techniques can be used to deposit durable coatings with multiscale porosity on soft tissue implant surfaces to promote optimal tissue integration. Specifically, the “liquid rope coil effect”, is exploited via direct ink writing, to create a controlled macro open-pore architecture, including over highly curved surfaces, while adapting atomizing spray deposition of a silicone ink t…

Materials scienceSwinesoft tissue implantsmedical grade siliconeSiliconesBiomedical EngineeringTissue integrationPharmaceutical Science02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiomaterialsMedical grade siliconechemistry.chemical_compoundSiliconeSettore BIO/10 - BiochimicaMaterials TestingAnimalsHumansPorosityImplant failureSoft tissueProstheses and Implantsmedical device coatings021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical scienceschemistrydevice-tissue interactionImplant0210 nano-technologyadditive manufacturingPorosityTissue ingrowthBiomedical engineeringAdvanced Healthcare Materials
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Assessing the Effects of VEGF Releasing Microspheres on the Angiogenic and Foreign Body Response to a 3D Printed Silicone-Based Macroencapsulation De…

2021

Macroencapsulation systems have been developed to improve islet cell transplantation but can induce a foreign body response (FBR). The development of neovascularization adjacent to the device is vital for the survival of encapsulated islets and is a limitation for long-term device success. Previously we developed additive manufactured multi-scale porosity implants, which demonstrated a 2.5-fold increase in tissue vascularity and integration surrounding the implant when compared to a non-textured implant. In parallel to this, we have developed poly(ε-caprolactone-PEG-ε-caprolactone)-b-poly(L-lactide) multiblock copolymer microspheres containing VEGF, which exhibited continued release of bioa…

RS1-441angiogenesisPharmacy and materia medicadiabetesmedical devicemulti-scale porositydiabetes; prevascularization; drug delivery; VEGF; medical device; multi-scale porosity; angiogenesisSettore BIO/10 - Biochimicadrug deliveryPharmaceutical ScienceprevascularizationVEGFArticlePharmaceutics
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