Ex vivo blood vessel bioreactor for analysis of the biodegradation of magnesium stent models with and without vessel wall integration

被引:44
|
作者
Wang, Juan [1 ,3 ]
Liu, Lumei [1 ,2 ]
Wu, Yifan [4 ]
Maitz, Manfred F. [5 ]
Wang, Zhihong [4 ]
Koo, Youngmi [1 ,2 ]
Zhao, Ansha [3 ]
Sankar, Jagannathan [1 ,2 ]
Kong, Deling [4 ]
Huang, Nan [2 ,3 ]
Yun, Yeoheung [1 ]
机构
[1] North Carolina A&T State Univ, NSF Engn Res Ctr Revolutionizing Metall Biomat, Greensboro, NC 27411 USA
[2] North Carolina A&T State Univ, FIT BEST Lab, Dept Chem Biol & Bio Engn, Greensboro, NC 27411 USA
[3] Southwest Jiaotong Univ, Key Lab Adv Technol Mat, Minist Educ, Sch Mat Sci & Engn, Chengdu 610031, Sichuan, Peoples R China
[4] Nankai Univ, State Key Lab Med Chem Biol, Key Lab Bioact Mat, Minist Educ, Tianjin 300071, Peoples R China
[5] Leibniz Inst Polymer Res Dresden, Max Bergmann Ctr Biomat Dresden, D-01069 Dresden, Germany
基金
中国国家自然科学基金; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Magnesium; Biodegradation; Vascular bioreactor; Ex vivo; In vitro; In vivo; IN-VITRO CORROSION; CORONARY-ARTERIES; MG ALLOYS; BEHAVIOR; BIOMATERIALS; MULTICENTER; DEGRADATION; ENVIRONMENT; TRANSPORT; PRODUCTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.actbio.2016.12.039
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Current in vitro models fail in predicting the degradation rate and mode of magnesium (Mg) stents in vivo. To overcome this, the microenvironment of the stent is simulated here in an ex vivo bioreactor with porcine aorta and circulating medium, and compared with standard static in vitro immersion and with in vivo rat aorta models. In ex vivo and in vivo conditions, pure Mg wires were exposed to the aortic lumen and inserted into the aortic wall to mimic early- and long-term implantation, respectively. Results showed that: 1) Degradation rates of Mg were similar for all the fluid diffusion conditions (in vitro static, aortic wall ex vivo and in vivo); however, Mg degradation under flow condition (i.e. in the lumen) in vivo was slower than ex vivo; 2) The corrosion mode in the samples can be mainly described as localized (in vitro), mixed localized and uniform (ex vivo), and uniform (in vivo); 3) Abundant degradation products (MgO/Mg(OH)(2) and Ca/P) with gas bubbles accumulated around the localized degradation regions ex vivo, but a uniform and thin degradation product layer was found in vivo. It is concluded that the ex vivo vascular bioreactor provides an improved test setting for magnesium degradation between static immersion and animal experiments and highlights its promising role in bridging degradation behavior and biological response for vascular stent research. Statement of Significance Magnesium and its alloys are candidates for a new generation of biodegradable stent materials. However, the in vitro degradation of magnesium stents does not match the clinical degradation rates, corrupting the validity of conventional degradation tests. Here we report an ex vivo vascular bioreactor, which allows simulation of the microenvironment with and without blood vessel integration to study the biodegradation of magnesium implants in comparison with standard in vitro test conditions and with in vivo implantations. The bioreactor did simulate the corrosion of an intramural implant very well, but showed too high degradation for non-covered implants. It is concluded that this system is in between static incubation and animal experiments concerning the predictivity of the degradation. (C) 2016 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:546 / 555
页数:10
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