Bioresorbable chitosan-based bone regeneration scaffold using various bioceramics and the alteration of photoinitiator concentration in an extended UV photocrosslinking reaction in an extended UV photocrosslinking reaction
Date
2022-10-28Author
Azaman, Farah Alwani
Zhou, Keran
Blanes-Martínez, María del Mar
Brennan Fournet, Margaret
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Bone tissue engineering (BTE) is an ongoing field of research based on clinical needs
to treat delayed and non-union long bone fractures. An ideal tissue engineering scaffold should
have a biodegradability property matching the rate of new bone turnover, be non-toxic, have good
mechanical properties, and mimic the natural extracellular matrix to induce bone regeneration. In this
study, biodegradable chitosan (CS) scaffolds were prepared with combinations of bioactive ceramics,
namely hydroxyapatite (HAp), tricalcium phosphate-α (TCP- α), and fluorapatite (FAp), with a fixed
concentration of benzophenone photoinitiator (50 µL of 0.1% (w/v)) and crosslinked using a UV curing
system. The efficacy of the one-step crosslinking reaction was assessed using swelling and compres sion testing, SEM and FTIR analysis, and biodegradation studies in simulated body fluid. Results in dicate that the scaffolds had comparable mechanical properties, which were: 13.69 ± 1.06 (CS/HAp),
12.82 ± 4.10 (CS/TCP-α), 13.87 ± 2.9 (CS/HAp/TCP-α), and 15.55 ± 0.56 (CS/FAp). Consequently,
various benzophenone concentrations were added to CS/HAp formulations to determine their effect
on the degradation rate. Based on the mechanical properties and degradation profile of CS/HAp,
it was found that 5 µL of 0.1% (w/v) benzophenone resulted in the highest degradation rate at
eight weeks (54.48% degraded), while maintaining compressive strength between (4.04 ± 1.49 to
10.17 ± 4.78 MPa) during degradation testing. These results indicate that incorporating bioceramics
with a suitable photoinitiator concentration can tailor the biodegradability and load-bearing capacity
of the scaffolds
The following license files are associated with this item: