With this new series of short publications MedDEV News wants to introduce various concepts of SMART IMPLANTS.
For better bone, use softer scaffolds
For better bone, use softer scaffolds
MedDEV News (sciencemag.org). Large segmental
gaps in bone caused by trauma or disease are typically treated with bone grafts
and stiff scaffolds to hold the fractured bone in place, but sometimes these
defects fail to heal. To optimize bone regeneration, Pobloth and colleagues
modified titanium-mesh scaffold designs to provide specific strains and
stresses within the fracture environment. In sheep with critical-sized
segmental defects, scaffolds that reduced stress shielding around tibial
fractures enhanced bone bridging compared to stiffer scaffolds and shielding
plates. Scaffolds can be tuned to evoke specific mechanical and biological
responses within bone defects, which could help guide regeneration.
Three-dimensional
(3D) titanium-mesh scaffolds offer many advantages over autologous bone
grafting for the regeneration of challenging large segmental bone defects. Our
study supports the hypothesis that endogenous bone defect regeneration can be
promoted by mechanobiologically optimized Ti-mesh scaffolds. Using finite
element techniques, two mechanically distinct Ti-mesh scaffolds were designed
in a honeycomb-like configuration to minimize stress shielding while ensuring
resistance against mechanical failure. Scaffold stiffness was altered through
small changes in the strut diameter only. Honeycombs were aligned to form three
differently oriented channels (axial, perpendicular, and tilted) to guide the
bone regeneration process. The soft scaffold (0.84 GPa stiffness) and a
3.5-fold stiffer scaffold (2.88 GPa) were tested in a critical size bone defect
model in vivo in sheep. To verify that local scaffold stiffness could enhance
healing, defects were stabilized with either a common locking compression plate
that allowed dynamic loading of the 4-cm defect or a rigid custom-made plate
that mechanically shielded the defect. Lower stress shielding led to earlier
defect bridging, increased endochondral bone formation, and advanced bony
regeneration of the critical size defect. This study demonstrates that
mechanobiological optimization of 3D additive manufactured Ti-mesh scaffolds
can enhance bone regeneration in a translational large animal study.
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen