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Hierarchical porous poly (L-lactic acid) fibrous vascular graft with controllable architectures and stable structure

[Display omitted] •An inventive technique to transform 2D electrospun fibrous membranes into 3D tubular structures.•A pioneering approach for tailoring vascular grafts’ diameter, wall thickness, and shape according to specific requirements.•Achieving favourable and controllable mechanical properties...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Materials & design 2024-04, Vol.240, p.112829, Article 112829
Main Authors: Meng, Chen, Song, Jun, Malekmohammadi, Samira, Meng, Jinmin, Wei, Wenyuan, Li, Renzhi, Feng, Jiling, Hugh Gong, R., Li, Jiashen
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:[Display omitted] •An inventive technique to transform 2D electrospun fibrous membranes into 3D tubular structures.•A pioneering approach for tailoring vascular grafts’ diameter, wall thickness, and shape according to specific requirements.•Achieving favourable and controllable mechanical properties and structural integrity in the resulting vascular graft.•Superior cell attachment and proliferation through increased specific surface area and wettability. Electrospun fibre has shown great potential in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine due to its high specific surface area and extracellular matrix-mimicking structure. However, fabricating an electrospun fibrous scaffold with controllable complex 3D macroscopic configuration remains a challenge. In the present study, a novel method was designed to transform 2D electrospun poly (L-lactic acid) (PLLA) fibrous membrane to tubular PLLA fibrous scaffolds with 3D complex but tailored configuration. The electrospun PLLA fibrous membrane was rolled around a designed mould and then treated with acetone. Treated vascular grafts’ length, diameter, and shape can be tailored by the mould parameters. Moreover, treated vascular grafts achieve favourable mechanical properties (Young’s modulus = 155 MPa, tensile stress = 8.79 MPa and radial force = 2.2 N) and the mechanical properties could be engineered on demand. In addition, treated vascular grafts kept their initial structure and size during long-term in vitro experiments once they were formed. In addition, with the acetone-induced recrystallization of PLLA, pristine solid PLLA fibres were changed to hierarchical porous PLLA fibres with ultra-high specific surface area (28.9 m2/g) and wettability (water contact angle = 101.32°), which has positive effects on cell adhesion and proliferation ability. A7r5 in vitro experiment shows that the proliferation rate of treated vascular grafts increased 153% at day 4 and 170.6% at day 7 compared with pristine vascular grafts.
ISSN:0264-1275
1873-4197
DOI:10.1016/j.matdes.2024.112829