Establishment and characterization of a rat model of scalp-cranial composite defect for multilayered tissue engineering

Author:

Zhu Yi1,Mei Ou1,Zhang Hui1,You Wulin1,Zhong Jiamin1,Collins Caralyn P.2,Shen Guowei1,Luo Changqi1,Wu Xingye1,Li Jingjing1,Shu Yi1,Wen Ya3,Luu Hue H.1,Shi Lewis L.1,Fan Jiaming1,He Tong-Chuan1,Ameer Guillermo A.2,Sun Cheng2,Wen Liangyuan4,Reid Russell R.1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Chicago Medical Center

2. Northwestern University

3. Capital Medical University

4. Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College

Abstract

Abstract

Composite cranial defects have individual functional and aesthetic ramifications, as well as societal burden, while posing significant challenges for reconstructive surgeons. Single-stage composite reconstruction of these deformities entail complex surgeries that bear many short- and long-term risks and complications. Current research on composite scalp-cranial defects is sparse and one-dimensional, often focusing solely on bone or skin. Thus, there is an unmet need for a simple, clinically relevant composite defect model in rodents, where there is a challenge in averting healing of the skin component via secondary intention. By utilizing a customizable (3D-printed) wound obturator, the scalp wound can be rendered non-healing for a long period (more than 6 weeks), with the cranial defect patent. The wound obturator shows minimal biotoxicity and will not cause severe endocranium-granulation adhesion. This composite defect model effectively slowed the scalp healing process and preserved the cranial defect, embodying the characteristics of a “chronic composite defect”. In parallel, an autologous reconstruction model was established as the positive control. This positive control exhibited reproducible healing of the skin within 3 weeks with variable degrees of osseointegration, consistent with clinical practice. Both models provide a stable platform for subsequent research not only for composite tissue engineering and scaffold design but also for mechanistic studies of composite tissue healing.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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