Development of hydrogel-based composite scaffolds containing eggshell particles for bone regeneration applications

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Abstract

This study describes the development and characterization of novel composite scaffolds, made of an alginate-chitosan hydrogel matrix containing eggshell (ES) particles, for bone tissue engineering applications. Scaffolds with ES particles, either untreated or treated with phosphoric acid to create a nanotextured particle surface, were compared to scaffolds without particles. Results indicate that the nanotexturing process exposed occluded ES proteins orthologous to those in human bone extracellular matrix. Scaffolds with ES or nanotextured ES (NTES) particles had a higher porosity (81 ± 4% and 89 ± 5%, respectively) than scaffolds without particles (59 ± 5%) (p =.002 and p

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Calvert, N. D., Proulx, S., Rodriguez-Navarro, A., Ahmed, T., Lehoux, E. A., Hincke, M. T., & Catelas, I. (2024). Development of hydrogel-based composite scaffolds containing eggshell particles for bone regeneration applications. Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part B Applied Biomaterials, 112(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.b.35296

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