Özet:
Special Symposium - Biomaterials for tissue engineering applications- Oral ONLY
Symposium: Vascularisation Strategies in Tissue Engineering
Introduction: Bone treatment methods comprising transplantation techniques and solid scaffold biomaterial strategies
suffer from multiple invasive surgical procedures. Recently, in-situ formed injectable hydrogels have drawn attentions
since they can be introduced into tissue defects via minimally invasive methods. Thermosensitive (sol-gel) hydrogels are
produced as a solution, and form gel at complex tissue defects by stimuli of the natural body temperature.The lack of
sufficient blood supply to tissues due to the insufficient vascularity, the ultimate bone healing in major defects remain very
challenging. Therefore, there is a huge demand of development of alternative pro-angiogenic biomaterials.The main aim
of this project is to develop novel chitosan based thermosensitive injectable hydrogel composites to stimulate bone
angiogenesis during bone regeneration.
Experimental methods: Biodegradable chitosan (CS) matrix has been integrated with hydroxyapatite (HA) due to its
inherited bioactivity. Heparin (Hep), which is a glycosaminoglycan was impregnated in CS/HA hydrogels and its
angiogenesis potential investigated due to its highly anionic nature that can lead anchorage of physiologically present
angiogenic growth factors.Chitosan based pH-dependent, thermoresponsive injectable solutions were produced with solgel
technique at 4ºC by neutralizing with sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and hydrogels were obtained upon incubation at
37ºC. Hydrogels were evaluated for their injectability and gelation properties. In addition, rheology measurements,
chemical analyses and biological analyses involving angiogenesis via Chick Chorioallantoic Membrane (CAM) assay,
bioactivity studies via Simulated Body Fluid (SBF) and in-vitro degradation studies were also carried out.
Results and discussions: The solution injectability forces was under than the maximum manual injection force and
allowing easy injection via 21 G and ticker sized needles which is suitable for orthopaedic and most dental
administrations [1],[2]. Thermosetting gelation has occurred at the vicinity of body temperature and gelation was initiated
from surface in 5-10 min at 37ºC. Interconnected porous hydrogels have exhibited pro-angiogenic response evaluated
through CAM confirmed that the hydrogels with minimal heparin concentrations performed the best. Bioactivity studies
with Simulated Body Fluid (SBF) showed needle-like carbonated apatite mineral deposition on hydrogels. In a six-weeks
of in-vitro degradation study, hydrogels incubated in PBS and Lysozyme-PBS media had substantial weigh loss reaching
up to 60 % and 70 %, respectively.
Conclusions: Bioactive and biodegradable CS/HA/Hep injectable hydrogels can find potential application to stimulate
bone angiogenesis for the repair and regeneration of non-load bearing bones.