Search results for "biocompatible materials"

showing 10 items of 243 documents

Uptake of silica covered Quantum Dots into living cells: Long term vitality and morphology study on hyaluronic acid biomaterials

2015

Quantum Dots (QDs) are promising very bright and stable fluorescent probes for optical studies in the biological field but water solubility and possible metal bio-contamination need to be addressed. In this work, a simple silica-QD hybrid system is prepared and the uptake in bovine chondrocytes living cells without any functionalization of the external protective silica shield is demonstrated. Moreover, long term treated cells vitality (up to 14 days) and the transfer of silica-QDs to the next cell generations are here reported. Confocal fluorescence microscopy was also used to determine the morphology of the so labelled cells and the relative silica-QDs distribution. Finally, we employ sil…

Quantum DotNanoparticleBiocompatible Materials02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundNanoparticleLabellingHyaluronic acidFluorescence microscopeLong term cell stainingBiocompatible MaterialSilicon Dioxide021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyMechanics of MaterialsSelf-healing hydrogelsMaterials Science (all)0210 nano-technologySilica Quantum DotMaterials scienceFluorescence confocal microscopyCell SurvivalSilicon dioxideChondrocyte bovine cellHyaluronic acidConfocalBioengineeringNanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physic010402 general chemistryBiomaterialsChondrocytesQuantum DotsAnimalsMechanics of MaterialCell ShapeSilica Quantum DotsAnimalMechanical Engineeringtechnology industry and agricultureChondrocyteequipment and suppliesSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)0104 chemical sciencesMicroscopy FluorescencechemistrySettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoQuantum dotBiophysicsNanoparticlesSurface modificationCattleMaterials Science and Engineering: C
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Biologic response of inguinal hernia prosthetics: a comparative study of conventional static meshes versus 3D dynamic implants.

2015

Despite improvements in prosthetics and surgical techniques, the rate of complications following inguinal hernia repair remains high. Among these, discomfort and chronic pain have become a source of increasing concern among surgeons. Poor quality of tissue ingrowth, such as thin scar plates or shrinking scars-typical results with conventional static implants and plugs-may contribute to these adverse events. Recently, a new type of 3D dynamically responsive implant was introduced to the market. This device, designed to be placed fixation-free, seems to induce ingrowth of viable and structured tissue instead of regressive fibrotic scarring. To elucidate the differences in biologic response be…

Sampling StudieTime FactorsTime FactorProstheses and ImplantBiomedical EngineeringMedicine (miscellaneous)BioengineeringBiocompatible MaterialsHernia InguinalPolypropylenesProsthesis DesignSampling StudiesStatistics NonparametricImaging Three-DimensionalProstheseTensile StrengthMaterials TestingHumansHerniorrhaphyBiocompatible MaterialMedicine (all)Inguinal herniaImplantTissue scaffoldProstheses and ImplantsSurgical MeshBiomaterialImmunohistochemistryProsthesis FailureSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleTissue regenerationBiomaterials; Herniorrhaphy; Implants; Inguinal hernia; Prostheses; Tissue regeneration; Tissue scaffolds; Biocompatible Materials; Hernia Inguinal; Herniorrhaphy; Humans; Imaging Three-Dimensional; Immunohistochemistry; Materials Testing; Polypropylenes; Prosthesis Design; Prosthesis Failure; Sampling Studies; Statistics Nonparametric; Tensile Strength; Time Factors; Prostheses and Implants; Surgical Mesh; Biomaterials; Biomedical Engineering; Bioengineering; Medicine (miscellaneous); Medicine (all)PolypropyleneHumanArtificial organs
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Silk fibroin scaffolds enhance cell commitment of adult rat cardiac progenitor cells.

2015

The use of three-dimensional (3D) cultures may induce cardiac progenitor cells to synthesize their own extracellular matrix (ECM) and sarcomeric proteins to initiate cardiac differentiation. 3D cultures grown on synthetic scaffolds may favour the implantation and survival of stem cells for cell therapy when pharmacological therapies are not efficient in curing cardiovascular diseases and when organ transplantation remains the only treatment able to rescue the patient’s life. Silk fibroin-based scaffolds may be used to increase cell affinity to biomaterials and may be chemically modified to improve cell adhesion. In the present study, porous, partially orientated and electrospun nanometric n…

Sarcomeresprogenitor cellCell SurvivalCell Culture TechniquesBiocompatible MaterialsReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionZ-bodieMicroscopy Electron TransmissionCell AdhesionElectrochemistryAnimalsConnectinnatural polymermyocardial tissue; progenitor cells; Z-bodies; tissue engineering; natural polymers; silk fibroinTissue EngineeringTissue ScaffoldsMyocardiumStem CellsWaterCell Differentiationmyocardial tissueBombyxFlow CytometryExtracellular MatrixRatssilk fibroinMicroscopy Electron ScanningCollagenFibroinsPorosityJournal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
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Biosilica-loaded poly(ϵ-caprolactone) nanofibers mats provide a morphogenetically active surface scaffold for the growth and mineralization of the os…

2014

Bioprinting/3D cell printing procedures for the preparation of scaffolds/implants have the potential to revolutionize regenerative medicine. Besides biocompatibility and biodegradability, the hardness of the scaffold material is of critical importance to allow sufficient mechanical protection and, to the same extent, allow migration, cell–cell, and cell–substrate contact formation of the matrix-embedded cells. In the present study, we present a strategy to encase a bioprinted, cell-containing, and soft scaffold with an electrospun mat. The electrospun poly(e-caprolactone) (PCL) nanofibers mats, containing tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS), were subsequently incubated with silicatein. Silicate…

ScaffoldBiocompatibilityPolyestersNanofibersOsteoclastsNanotechnologyBiocompatible MaterialsApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMineralization (biology)chemistry.chemical_compoundCalcification PhysiologicOsteoclastCell Line TumormedicineHumansNanotechnologySaos-2 cellsCell ProliferationTissue ScaffoldsChemistrytechnology industry and agricultureGeneral MedicineSilicon DioxideElectrospinning3. Good healthTetraethyl orthosilicatemedicine.anatomical_structureChemical engineeringNanofiberMolecular MedicineBiotechnologyBiotechnology journal
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Cell culture models of higher complexity in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

2007

Cell culture techniques have tended to be used in biomaterial research as a screening method prior to embarking on specific in vivo experimentation. This presentation aims at showing that it is possible to develop more sophisticated in vitro systems using primary human cells in co-culture with other cell types and biomaterials in a three-dimensional setting. While the predictive value of such systems is still not proven these models can be employed to unravel the complexity of biological systems in order to understand molecular mechanisms of cell-cell and cell-material interactions. The brief overview is under the headings of basic principles of relevant culture systems, the study of inflam…

ScaffoldBiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringCell Culture TechniquesBioengineeringBiocompatible MaterialsBiologyRegenerative MedicineRegenerative medicineBiomaterialsTissue Culture Techniques3D cell cultureTissue engineeringAnimalsHumansNanotechnologyRegenerationInflammationWound HealingTissue EngineeringRegeneration (biology)BiomaterialEndothelial CellsPredictive valueCoculture TechniquesMechanics of MaterialsCell cultureCeramics and CompositesBiochemical engineeringBiomedical engineeringBiomaterials
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From single fiber to macro-level mechanics: A structural finite-element model for elastomeric fibrous biomaterials

2014

In the present work, we demonstrate that the mesoscopic in-plane mechanical behavior of membrane elastomeric scaffolds can be simulated by replication of actual quantified fibrous geometries. Elastomeric electrospun polyurethane (ES-PEUU) scaffolds, with and without particulate inclusions, were utilized. Simulations were developed from experimentally-derived fiber network geometries, based on a range of scaffold isotropic and anisotropic behaviors. These were chosen to evaluate the effects on macro-mechanics based on measurable geometric parameters such as fiber intersections, connectivity, orientation, and diameter. Simulations were conducted with only the fiber material model parameters a…

ScaffoldFabricationMaterials scienceFinite elements methodPolymersPolyestersmicrostructureFinite Element AnalysisPolyurethanesBiomedical EngineeringBiocompatible MaterialsMicroscopy Atomic ForceElastomercaffoldArticleBiomaterialsMaterials TestingElasticity (economics)Composite materialAnisotropyMesoscopic physicsTissue EngineeringTissue Scaffoldstissue engineering.Polyethylene TerephthalatesIsotropyMechanicsElasticityFinite element methodMechanics of MaterialselectrospunAnisotropyStress MechanicalJournal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
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A self-sterilizing fluorescent Nanocomposite as versatile material with broad-spectrum Antibiofilm features

2020

Abstract Hematogenous spread of infections from colonized central intravenous catheters or central lines is a long-recognized problem with infection rates of 2 and 6.8 per 1000 days, respectively. Besides, removal of severe microbial colonization of implanted biomaterials is still a challenge and usually requires invasive operations. Hence, on demand self-sterilizing materials are required to avoid explant of colonized biomaterials and improve patient compliance. Moreover, photoluminescence is needed to make trackable biomaterials, which can be easily monitored upon implanting them in the body. Here, we propose the incorporation of near infrared (NIR) sensitive red-emitting carbon nanodot (…

ScaffoldMaterials scienceBioengineeringNanotechnologyBiocompatible Materials02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesNanocompositesBiomaterialsAnti-Infective AgentsHumansNanocompositeBiofilmBiomaterialSterilizationPhotothermal therapy021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyFluorescenceElectrospinning0104 chemical sciencesAntimicrobials Biofilms Nanocomposites Carbon nanodots Self-sterilizing Fluorescent biomaterialsMechanics of MaterialsBiofilmsNanodot0210 nano-technology
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Polyaspartamide-polylactide electrospun scaffolds for potential topical release of Ibuprofen.

2012

In this work, the production and characterization of electrospun scaffolds of the copolymer α,β-poly(N-2-hydroxyethyl)-DL-aspartamide-graft-polylactic acid (PHEA-g-PLA), proposed for a potential topical release of Ibuprofen (IBU), are reported. The drug has been chemically linked to PHEA-g-PLA and/or physically mixed to the copolymer before electrospinning. Degradation studies have been performed as a function of time in Dulbecco phosphate buffer solution pH 7.4, for both unloaded and drug-loaded scaffolds. By using an appropriate ratio between drug physically blended to the copolymer and drug-copolymer conjugate, a useful control of its release can be obtained. MTS assay on human dermal fi…

ScaffoldMaterials scienceMts assayCell SurvivalAdministration TopicalPolyestersBiomedical EngineeringBiocompatible MaterialsIbuprofenCell LineBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundPolylactic acidPolymer chemistrymedicineCopolymerCell AdhesionHumansCell adhesionAspartic AcidDrug CarriersTissue ScaffoldsMetals and AlloysDermisAnalgesics Non-NarcoticFibroblastsIbuprofenElectrospinningChemical engineeringchemistryCeramics and Compositesmedicine.drugConjugateJournal of biomedical materials research. Part A
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Synthesis, characterization and foaming of PHEA-PLLA, a new graft copolymer for biomedical engineering

2014

Abstract In this study a chemical grafting procedure was set up in order to link high molecular weight poly L-lactic acid (PLLA) chains to the hydrophilic α,β-poly(N-2-hydroxyethyl)-DL-aspartamide (PHEA) backbone. A graft copolymer named PHEA-g-PLLA (or simply PHEA–PLLA) was obtained bearing a degree of derivatization of 1.0 mol.% of PLLA as grafted chain. This new hybrid derivative offers both the opportune crystallinity necessary for the production of scaffolds trough a thermally induced phase separation (TIPS) technique and the proper chemical reactivity to perform further functionalizations with bio-effectors and drugs. PHEA–PLLA porous scaffolds for tissue engineering applications were…

ScaffoldMaterials sciencePolyestersBioengineeringBiocompatible MaterialsScaffoldBiomaterialschemistry.chemical_compoundCrystallinityTissue engineeringCopolymerComposite materialPorosityDerivatizationDrug CarriersCalorimetry Differential ScanningTissue EngineeringTemperatureProteinsPolymer graftCharacterization (materials science)chemistryMechanics of MaterialsPoly-L-lactic acidThermally induced phase separationPorosityDerivative (chemistry)
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Production of a Double-Layer Scaffold for the “On-Demand” Release of Fibroblast-like Limbal Stem Cells

2019

The production and characterization of a double layer scaffold, to be used as a system for the “on demand” release of corneal limbal stem cells are here reported. The devices used in the clinics and proposed so far in the scientific literature, for the release of corneal stem cells in the treatment of limbal stem cell deficiency, cannot control the in vivo space-time release of cells since the biomaterial of which they are composed is devoid of stimuli responsiveness features. Our approach was to produce a scaffold composed of two different polymeric layers that give the device the appropriate mechanical properties to be placed on the ocular surface and the possibility of releasing the stem…

ScaffoldMaterials sciencePolyestersFibroblast-like limbal stem cells Limbal stem cells deficiency On demand cell releasing systems Electrospun scaffold Hyaluronic acid based film coatingBiocompatible Materials02 engineering and technologyLimbus CorneaeLimbal stem cell deficiencyCornea03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCell Line TumorOn demandmedicineHumansGeneral Materials ScienceFibroblastCells CulturedDouble layer (biology)Stem CellsEpithelium CornealEpithelial CellsFibroblasts021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyeye diseasesCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureSettore CHIM/09 - Farmaceutico Tecnologico ApplicativoMicroscopy Electron Scanning030221 ophthalmology & optometrysense organsStem cell0210 nano-technologyStem Cell TransplantationACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
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