Abstract
Nowadays, the vascular tissue engineering plays an important role in the treatment of cardiovascular disease in the world. This is due to the versatility of the fabrication techniques available, a wide range of biomaterials selection and custom-made scaffold characteristics. In this work, a cylindrical scaffold was fabricated from a biodegradable copolymer of poly (lactide acid co-caprolactone) (PLCL) via freeze-drying (FD) technique. The aim was to evaluate the cell viability of PLCL cylindrical scaffold fabricated via freeze-drying technique at 6 and 9% PLCL concentration. The water contact angle was employed to determine the hydrophilicity of the fabricated PLCL porous scaffold. Besides, the porous morphology was evaluated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Cell viability was characterized through colorimetric assay using cell counting kit-8 (CCK-8) at different time points of 1, 4 and 7 days. The overall results indicated that at the outer face of the cylinder, the hydrophilicity was higher than the inner face which confirmed by the water contact angle. Whilst, the scaffold at low concentration of PLCL (6 %) exhibited the lower contact angle at outer view than the high PLCL content with the value of 94.35±12.4° and 103.59 ± 5.63° respectively. This result corroborated well with the pore sizes observed in the SEM analysis, the mean value of 6% PLCL scaffold (21.33 ± 5.77 μm) was higher as compared to 9% PLCL (11.98 ± 2.35 μm). It is suggested that the hydrophilicity and bigger pores are favorable for cell adhesion. The cell viability was increased for PLCL scaffold at both concentration as time was prolonged. At 6% PLCL, higher cell viability was obtained which confirmed that larger pore size has enhanced the cell adhesion and proliferation. In summary, the PLCL cylindrical scaffolds via freeze-drying have a significant potential for vascular tissue engineering application.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Tam, T. T., Todo, M., Cheong, K. Y., & Hamid, Z. A. A. (2020). Evaluation of cell viability of porous scaffold fabricated via freeze-drying technique for vascular tissue engineering. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 2267). American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0017437
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