Länsman S (1), Leinonen S (1), Kellomäki M (2), Törmälä P (2),
Waris T (3), Ashammakhi N (1).
1. Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Oulu University
Hospital, Oulu, Finland.
2. Institute of Biomaterials, Tampere University of Technology, Tampere,
Finland.
3. Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Tampere University
Hospital, Tampere, Finland
Background:
Various scaffolds have been developed for tissue engineering. Knitted
PLDLA 96/4 scaffolds have recently been introduced to replace Swanson
prosthesis used for MCP joint replacement in rheumathoid patients. The
scaffold is aimed to follow the principles of in situ tissue-engineering
and form a functional MCP joint by inducing ingrowth of fibrous tissue.
So far, no in vivo information has been available on this scaffold.
Aims:
To study the poly-L/D-lactide (PLDLA) 96/4 scaffolds in vivo (in the subcutaneous
tissue of rats).
Material and methods:
Cylindrical knitted mesh scaffolds were made of PLDLA 96/4 (15x3.5 mm).
Three types were evaluated: Dense (weight 30 g), ordinary (25 g) and loose
(20 g). Four scaffolds (2 ordinary, one dense and one loose type) were
implanted in the dorsal subcutis of each of 32 Sprague-Dawley male rats
of 16-18 weeks old (average 17). The implants were retrieved after 3 days,
1, 2, 3, 6, 12, 24 and 52 weeks postoperatively. The implants were removed
with 5 mm of surrounding tissues. One ordinary scaffold was examined for
characterisation of mechanical properties. The rest were examined histologically
for tissue reaction and ingrowth in special and temporal terms. Tissue
ingrowth into the scaffolds and its maturation was evaluated. The thickness
of the fibrous capsule was measured (minimum of 20 measurements from each
slide, 5 samples from each follow-up group, except for the 3-days-group
which consisted of three samples only). The data was evaluated statistically.
Results:
No postoperative complications were encountered. Tissue ingrowth reached
the innermost part of the implants within three weeks. Tissue ingrowth
occurred in similar from the top, the bottom and from the sides of the
implant. Fibrin was the first to fill in the scaffold followed by the
cells and at last collagen fibers were found in the structure. The thickness
of the capsule surrounding the scaffold changed by the time, being thickest
at 3 weeks then gradually getting thinner. The orientation of the collagen
fibers inside the implant changed from non-oriented to highly oriented
fibers making septae. The septae appeared first between PLDLA 96/4 bundles
of filaments (i.e. between PLA fibers), later also between individual
PLDLA 96/4 filaments. Thus the septae grew first into the larger pores
then into the smaller gaps. At the longest follow-up periods the septae
were highly oriented between PLDLA 96/4 fibers and filaments. e.
Conclusions:
Upon implantation in rats, fibrous tissue ingrowth proceeds from all sides
of the scaffold filling it completely at 3 weeks. The scaffold is encapsulated
into a fibrous tissue that is reaches highest thickness at 3 weeks and
gets thinner afterwards. Fibrous tissue first fills spaces between PLDLA
96%4 fibers and then the smaller spaces between individual PLDLA 96/4
filaments. Fibrous tissue collagen fibers get more organized by time.
Keywords: Scaffold, Tissue Engineering, PLDLA, Fibrous tissue.
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