Colin Hiscox, Juanyong Li, Ziyang Gao, Dmitry Korkin, Cosme Furlong, Kristen Billiar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mechanical properties of engineered connective tissues are critical for their success, yet modern sensors that measure physical qualities of tissues for quality control are invasive and destructive. The goal of this work was to develop a noncontact, nondestructive method to measure mechanical attributes of engineered skin substitutes during production without disturbing the sterile culture packaging. We optimized a digital holographic vibrometry (DHV) system to measure the mechanical behavior of Apligraf living cellular skin substitute through the clear packaging in multiple conditions: resting on solid agar as when the tissue is shipped, on liquid media in which it is grown, and freely suspended in air as occurs when the media is removed for feeding. We utilized full-field measurement to assess the complete surface deformation pattern to compare with vibration theory and found the patterns observed in air showed the closest behavior to theory. To simulate the effects of the actual culture dish geometry and the trilayer composition of the tissue on the porous membrane support, we employed finite element (FE) analysis. To simulate changes in thickness and stiffness that may occur with manufacturing process variations, we dried samples over time and observed measurable increases in the fundamental mode frequency which could be predicted by altering the thickness of the tissue layers in the FE model. However, quantitative estimates of the engineered tissue stiffness based on vibration theory are unrealistically high due to the signal being dominated by the stiff underlying membrane on which the tissue is cultured. Thus, although DHV is not able to specifically quantify the thickness or modulus or identify small spot defects, it has the potential to be used assess the overall properties of a tissue in-line and noninvasively for quality control.
期刊介绍:
ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering is the leading journal in the field of biomaterials, serving as an international forum for publishing cutting-edge research and innovative ideas on a broad range of topics:
Applications and Health – implantable tissues and devices, prosthesis, health risks, toxicology
Bio-interactions and Bio-compatibility – material-biology interactions, chemical/morphological/structural communication, mechanobiology, signaling and biological responses, immuno-engineering, calcification, coatings, corrosion and degradation of biomaterials and devices, biophysical regulation of cell functions
Characterization, Synthesis, and Modification – new biomaterials, bioinspired and biomimetic approaches to biomaterials, exploiting structural hierarchy and architectural control, combinatorial strategies for biomaterials discovery, genetic biomaterials design, synthetic biology, new composite systems, bionics, polymer synthesis
Controlled Release and Delivery Systems – biomaterial-based drug and gene delivery, bio-responsive delivery of regulatory molecules, pharmaceutical engineering
Healthcare Advances – clinical translation, regulatory issues, patient safety, emerging trends
Imaging and Diagnostics – imaging agents and probes, theranostics, biosensors, monitoring
Manufacturing and Technology – 3D printing, inks, organ-on-a-chip, bioreactor/perfusion systems, microdevices, BioMEMS, optics and electronics interfaces with biomaterials, systems integration
Modeling and Informatics Tools – scaling methods to guide biomaterial design, predictive algorithms for structure-function, biomechanics, integrating bioinformatics with biomaterials discovery, metabolomics in the context of biomaterials
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine – basic and applied studies, cell therapies, scaffolds, vascularization, bioartificial organs, transplantation and functionality, cellular agriculture