Creating and Transferring an Innervated, Vascularized Muscle Flap Made from an Elastic, Cellularized Tissue Construct Developed In Situ

Author:

Sato Hideyoshi1ORCID,Kohyama Keishi1,Uchibori Takafumi1,Takanari Keisuke1,Huard Johnny2,Badylak Stephen F.134,D'Amore Antonio1345,Wagner William R.1346ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine University of Pittsburgh 450 Technology Dr. Pittsburgh PA 15219 USA

2. Center for Regenerative Sports Medicine Steadman Philippon Research Institute 181 West Meadow Dr. Vail CO 81657 USA

3. Department of Surgery University of Pittsburgh 200 Lothrop Street Pittsburgh PA 15213 USA

4. Department of Bioengineering University of Pittsburgh 3700 O'Hara Street, Benedum Hall of Engineering Pittsburgh PA 15261 USA

5. Fondazione Ri.MED Palermo 90133 Italy

6. Department of Chemical Engineering University of Pittsburgh 3700 O'Hara Street, Benedum Hall of Engineering Pittsburgh PA 15261 USA

Abstract

AbstractReanimating facial structures following paralysis and muscle loss is a surgical objective that would benefit from improved options for harvesting appropriately sized muscle flaps. The objective of this study is to apply electrohydrodynamic processing to generate a cellularized, elastic, biocomposite scaffold that could develop and mature as muscle in a prepared donor site in vivo, and then be transferred as a thin muscle flap with a vascular and neural pedicle. First, an effective extracellular matrix (ECM) gel type is selected for the biocomposite scaffold from three types of ECM combined with poly(ester urethane)urea microfibers and evaluated in rat abdominal wall defects. Next, two types of precursor cells (muscle‐derived and adipose‐derived) are compared in constructs placed in rat hind limb defects for muscle regeneration capacity. Finally, with a construct made from dermal ECM and muscle‐derived stem cells, protoflaps are implanted in one hindlimb for development and then microsurgically transferred as a free flap to the contralateral limb where stimulated muscle function is confirmed. This construct generation and in vivo incubation procedure may allow the generation of small‐scale muscle flaps appropriate for transfer to the face, offering a new strategy for facial reanimation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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