Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering

Tendon tears caused by age, trauma or sports-related injuries are an increasing problem. Rotator cuff injuries in particular often have a poor outcome due to the state of the tear and surgeries leading to re-rupturing of the repaired tendon. Tissue ngineering strategies aim to support the native te...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dvorak, N
Other Authors: Mouthuy, P
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
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author Dvorak, N
author2 Mouthuy, P
author_facet Mouthuy, P
Dvorak, N
author_sort Dvorak, N
collection OXFORD
description Tendon tears caused by age, trauma or sports-related injuries are an increasing problem. Rotator cuff injuries in particular often have a poor outcome due to the state of the tear and surgeries leading to re-rupturing of the repaired tendon. Tissue ngineering strategies aim to support the native tendon in its ability to self-repair through the application of cells and biomaterials. In recent years the importance of mechanical stimulation to tissue engineering constructs came into focus. In order to apply physiologically relevant stresses, new bioreactors capable of multiaxial stimulation need to be developed. One such bioreactor is presented in this work. The bioreactor consists of a filamentous electrospun scaffold, strongly resembling the native tendon structure. A flexible gas-permeable membrane encloses the system and maintains sterility. The aim of this thesis was to characterize the performance of this flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering. The main objectives were to identify a seeding technique that would lead to an even cell distribution throughout the scaffold. Next a computational model was built and applied to investigate nutrient and metabolite distribution throughout the bioreactor, their influence on cell growth, and to gain insight in how different flow rates impact the system. The model was validated through a set of experiments. Lastly, factors that can improve cell retention on the scaffold needed to be identified. We identified that following seeding, the capillary effect was a greater determiner of cell distribution than seeding technique. The computational model was able to give us 3D spatial insight into the system that was otherwise not available. Furthermore it assessed the importance of the membrane being permeable to gasses, and it could assure us that stopping the media flow was not going to affect cell growth over a period of 20 hours. Through the validation experiment, superior outcomes were identified from higher flow rates, but shortcomings of the model were also highlighted. The sensors optimized for this set of experiments gave robust measurements with satisfying robustness which will be used in future work. Lastly, we could not identify the main reason for a lack of cell attachment to the scaffolds. Future work will include further investigations into the mechanisms behind poor cell retention on our scaffolds, and will see the expansion of the bioreactor as a mechanical stimulation platform.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1c0eaf6f-c634-48fa-9ca4-a3d62b5026442024-08-16T09:18:30ZPerformance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineeringThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:1c0eaf6f-c634-48fa-9ca4-a3d62b502644Biomedical engineeringMaterials scienceComputational biologyTissue engineeringEnglishHyrax Deposit2023Dvorak, NMouthuy, PWaters, SYe, HCarr, AHulley, PPaxton, JTendon tears caused by age, trauma or sports-related injuries are an increasing problem. Rotator cuff injuries in particular often have a poor outcome due to the state of the tear and surgeries leading to re-rupturing of the repaired tendon. Tissue ngineering strategies aim to support the native tendon in its ability to self-repair through the application of cells and biomaterials. In recent years the importance of mechanical stimulation to tissue engineering constructs came into focus. In order to apply physiologically relevant stresses, new bioreactors capable of multiaxial stimulation need to be developed. One such bioreactor is presented in this work. The bioreactor consists of a filamentous electrospun scaffold, strongly resembling the native tendon structure. A flexible gas-permeable membrane encloses the system and maintains sterility. The aim of this thesis was to characterize the performance of this flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering. The main objectives were to identify a seeding technique that would lead to an even cell distribution throughout the scaffold. Next a computational model was built and applied to investigate nutrient and metabolite distribution throughout the bioreactor, their influence on cell growth, and to gain insight in how different flow rates impact the system. The model was validated through a set of experiments. Lastly, factors that can improve cell retention on the scaffold needed to be identified. We identified that following seeding, the capillary effect was a greater determiner of cell distribution than seeding technique. The computational model was able to give us 3D spatial insight into the system that was otherwise not available. Furthermore it assessed the importance of the membrane being permeable to gasses, and it could assure us that stopping the media flow was not going to affect cell growth over a period of 20 hours. Through the validation experiment, superior outcomes were identified from higher flow rates, but shortcomings of the model were also highlighted. The sensors optimized for this set of experiments gave robust measurements with satisfying robustness which will be used in future work. Lastly, we could not identify the main reason for a lack of cell attachment to the scaffolds. Future work will include further investigations into the mechanisms behind poor cell retention on our scaffolds, and will see the expansion of the bioreactor as a mechanical stimulation platform.
spellingShingle Biomedical engineering
Materials science
Computational biology
Tissue engineering
Dvorak, N
Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title_full Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title_fullStr Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title_full_unstemmed Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title_short Performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
title_sort performance of a flexible bioreactor for tendon tissue engineering
topic Biomedical engineering
Materials science
Computational biology
Tissue engineering
work_keys_str_mv AT dvorakn performanceofaflexiblebioreactorfortendontissueengineering