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Preparation and characterization of polycaprolactone-polyethylene glycol methyl ether and polycaprolactone-chitosan electrospun mats potential for vascular tissue engineering

Authors
Sultana, TamannaAmirian, JhalehPark, ChanmiLee, Seung JinLee, Byong-Taek
Issue Date
Nov-2017
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Keywords
Electro-spinning; surface modification; polycaprolactone; polyethylene glycol methyl ether; chitosan; vascular grafts
Citation
Journal of Biomaterials Applications, v.32, no.5, pp 648 - 662
Pages
15
Journal Title
Journal of Biomaterials Applications
Volume
32
Number
5
Start Page
648
End Page
662
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/7083
DOI
10.1177/0885328217733849
ISSN
0885-3282
1530-8022
Abstract
Recently, natural polymers are frequently comingled with synthetic polymers either by physical or chemical modification to prepare numerous tissue-engineered graft with promising biological function, strength, and stability. The aim of this study was to determine the efficiency for vascular tissue engineering of two distinctly different mats, one that comprised polycaprolactone-polyethylene glycol methyl ether and other that comprised polycaprolactone-chitosan. Nano/microfibrous mats prepared from electro-spinning were characterized for fiber diameter, porosity, wettability, and mechanical strength. Biological efficacy on both biodegradable mats was assessed by rat bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells, and polycaprolactone-polyethylene glycol methyl ether showed feasibility for use as an inner layer by inducing endothelial-specific gene expression and polycaprolactone-chitosan as an outer layer on dual layered without sacrificing tensile strength, small-diameter blood vessels. Therefore, scaffolds fabricated from this research could be potential sources for tissue-engineered vascular graft and could also overcome the well-known drawbacks, such as thrombogenicity and stenosis, in managing vascular disease.
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College of Medicine > Department of Regenerative Medicine > 1. Journal Articles
College of Medicine > Department of Cardiovascula Surgery > 1. Journal Articles

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