In vitro evaluation of essential mechanical properties and cell behaviors of a novel polylactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA)-based tubular scaffold for small-diameter vascular tissue Engineering

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Abstract

In this paper, we investigate essential mechanical properties and cell behaviors of the scaffolds fabricated by rolling polylactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA) electrospinning (ES) films for small-diameter vascular grafts (inner diameter < 6 mm). The newly developed strategy can be used to fabricate small diameter vascular grafts with or without pre-seeded cells, which are two main branches for small diameter vascular engineering. We demonstrate that the mechanical properties of our rolling-based scaffolds can be tuned flexibly by the number of layers. For cell-free scaffolds, with the increase of layer number, burst pressure and suture retention increase, elastic tensile modulus maintains unchanged statistically, but compliance and liquid leakage decrease. For cell-containing scaffolds, seeding cells will significantly decrease the liquid leakage, but there are no statistical differences for other mechanical properties; moreover, cells live and proliferate well in the scaffold after a 6-day culture.

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Wang, N., Zheng, W., Cheng, S., Zhang, W., Liu, S., & Jiang, X. (2017). In vitro evaluation of essential mechanical properties and cell behaviors of a novel polylactic-co-glycolic acid (PLGA)-based tubular scaffold for small-diameter vascular tissue Engineering. Polymers, 9(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/polym9080318

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