三维打印生物可吸收气管夹板的降解和疲劳行为

IF 3.2 4区 医学 Q2 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Jenna M. Wahbeh, John Lama, Sang-Hyun Park, Edward Ebramzadeh, Scott J. Hollister, Sophia N. Sangiorgio
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引用次数: 0

摘要

严重的婴幼儿气管支气管畸形(TBM)通常采用侵入性手术和固定大小的植入物来治疗,以便在呼吸过程中支撑气管。目前已开发出一种新型 3D 打印腔外夹板,作为一种灵活且可生物吸收的替代方法。因此,本研究的目的是利用体外呼吸模拟器模型,全面评估两种尺寸的新型生物可吸收 3D 打印夹板设计在一系列生理降解条件下的结构刚度和失效模式。在磷酸盐缓冲盐水(PBS)和氢氧化钠(NaOH)两种不同降解条件下,对两种厚度(2 毫米和 3 毫米)的新型 3D 打印生物可吸收夹板进行了评估。对夹板进行了模拟呼吸加载,包括夹板循环打开和关闭 2 毫米,目标持续时间为 750 万至 3000 万次循环。另一组新夹板在各自的降解条件下进行静态浸泡,以比较分析降解介质循环加载的影响。在成功模拟呼吸或静态浸泡后,评估了非破坏性拉伸和压缩强度,并通过破坏性拉伸测试计算了整体刚度。本研究表明,在模拟呼吸条件下,夹板的降解程度比浸泡条件下更明显。循环模拟呼吸试样的失效时间远远早于预期的加载时间。随着时间的推移,2 毫米和 3 毫米夹板在静态降解条件下变得越来越柔软。有趣的是,2 毫米和 3 毫米厚度夹板的抗压和抗拉强度差别不大。PCL 的生物可吸收性提供了一个宝贵的优势,因为它消除了夹板移除手术的需要,并随着时间的推移和降解增加了装置的灵活性。这种灵活性的提高至关重要,因为它允许婴儿的气管在 2 年的预期使用期内不受抑制地生长发育。这项研究结果证实,夹板能够承受拉力,防止气管塌陷。这项研究进一步证实了 3D 打印夹板在治疗婴儿气管塌陷症方面的成功应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Degradation and Fatigue Behavior of 3D-Printed Bioresorbable Tracheal Splints

Degradation and Fatigue Behavior of 3D-Printed Bioresorbable Tracheal Splints

Severe infantile tracheobronchomalacia (TBM) is often treated with invasive surgery and fixed-size implants to support the trachea during respiration. A novel 3D-printed extra-luminal splint has been developed as a flexible and bioresorbable alternative. Therefore, the goal of the present study was to use an in vitro breathing simulator model to comprehensively evaluate the structural stiffness and failure modes of two sizes of a novel bioresorbable 3D-printed splint design under a range of physiological degradation conditions. Two thicknesses, 2 mm and 3 mm, of a novel 3D-printed bioresorbable splint were evaluated under two different degradation conditions, phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH). The splints were subjected to simulated breathing loading, involving a cyclic opening and closing of the splint by 2 mm, for a targeted duration of 7.5 to 30 million cycles. A separate new set of splints were statically soaked in their respective degradation condition for a comparative analysis of the effects of cyclic loading by the degradation medium. After successfully simulated breathing or static soaking, non-destructive tensile and compressive strengths were evaluated, and overall stiffness was calculated from destructive tensile testing. The present study indicates that the splints were more significantly degraded under simulated breathing conditions than under soaking. Cyclic simulated breathing specimens failed far earlier than the intended duration of loading. Over time, both 2 mm and 3 mm splints became increasingly more flexible when subjected to the static degradation conditions. Interestingly, there was little difference in the compressive and tensile strengths of the 2 mm and 3 mm thickness splints. The bioresorbable nature of PCL offers a valuable advantage as it eliminates the need for splint removal surgery and increases device flexibility over time with degradation. This increased flexibility is crucial because it allows for uninhibited growth and development of the infant's trachea over the intended use period of 2 years. The results of this study confirm that the splints were able to withstand tensile forces to prevent tracheal collapse. This study further supports the successful use of 3D-printed splints in the treatment of infantile TBM.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.90%
发文量
199
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Biomedical Materials Research – Part B: Applied Biomaterials is a highly interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal serving the needs of biomaterials professionals who design, develop, produce and apply biomaterials and medical devices. It has the common focus of biomaterials applied to the human body and covers all disciplines where medical devices are used. Papers are published on biomaterials related to medical device development and manufacture, degradation in the body, nano- and biomimetic- biomaterials interactions, mechanics of biomaterials, implant retrieval and analysis, tissue-biomaterial surface interactions, wound healing, infection, drug delivery, standards and regulation of devices, animal and pre-clinical studies of biomaterials and medical devices, and tissue-biopolymer-material combination products. Manuscripts are published in one of six formats: • original research reports • short research and development reports • scientific reviews • current concepts articles • special reports • editorials Journal of Biomedical Materials Research – Part B: Applied Biomaterials is an official journal of the Society for Biomaterials, Japanese Society for Biomaterials, the Australasian Society for Biomaterials, and the Korean Society for Biomaterials. Manuscripts from all countries are invited but must be in English. Authors are not required to be members of the affiliated Societies, but members of these societies are encouraged to submit their work to the journal for consideration.
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