Cartilage made easy with novel hybrid printer
              22nd November 2012
              The printing of 3D tissue has taken a major step forward with the creation of a novel hybrid printer that simplifies the process of creating implantable cartilage.
               
              
               
              The printer is presented today, 22nd November, in the journal Biofabrication. It was used to create cartilage constructs that could eventually be   implanted in injured patients, helping re-grow cartilage in specific   areas, such as the joints.
                
                The printer is a combination of two   low-cost fabrication techniques: a traditional ink jet printer and an   electrospinning machine. Combining these systems allowed the scientists   to build a structure made from both natural and synthetic materials.   Synthetic materials ensure the strength of the construct and natural gel   materials provide an environment that promotes cell growth.
                
                In   this study, the hybrid system produced cartilage constructs with   increased mechanical stability compared to those created by an ink jet   printer using gel material alone. The constructs were also shown to   maintain their functional characteristics in the laboratory and a   real-life system.
                
                Key to this was the use of the   electrospinning machine, which uses an electrical current to generate   very fine fibres from a polymer solution. Electrospinning (see video below) allows the   composition of polymers to be easily controlled and therefore produces   porous structures that encourage cells to integrate into surrounding   tissue.
               
              
               
              “This is a proof of concept study and illustrates that a   combination of materials and fabrication methods generates durable   implantable constructs,” said James Yoo, M.D., Ph.D., Professor at the   Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and an author on the   study. “Other methods of fabrication, such as robotic systems, are   currently being developed to further improve the production of   implantable tissue constructs.”
              In this study, flexible mats of   electrospun synthetic polymer were combined, layer-by-layer, with a   solution of cartilage cells from a rabbit ear that were deposited using   the traditional ink jet printer. The constructs were square with a 10cm   diagonal and a 0.4mm thickness.
                
                The researchers tested their   strength by loading them with variable weights and, after one week,   tested to see if the cartilage cells were still alive.
                
                The   constructs were also inserted into mice for two, four and eight weeks to   see how they performed in a real life system. After eight weeks of   implantation, the constructs appeared to have developed the structures   and properties that are typical of elastic cartilage, demonstrating   their potential for insertion into a human patient.
                
              The researchers   state that in a future scenario, cartilage constructs could be   clinically applied by using an MRI scan of a body part, such as the   knee, as a blueprint for creating a matching construct. A careful   selection of scaffold material for each patient’s construct would allow   the implant to withstand mechanical forces while encouraging new   cartilage to organise and fill the defect.
 
              Comments »