Benefits of In Situ Foamed and Printed Porous Scaffolds in Wound Healing

Author:

Seyedsalehi Amir1ORCID,Saeedinejad Farnoosh1,Toro Steven1,Alipanah Fatemeh1,Quint Jacob1,Schmidt Tannin A.1,Samandari Mohamadmahdi1ORCID,Tamayol Ali1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Connecticut Health Center Farmington CT 06030 USA

Abstract

AbstractMacroporous hydrogels have shown significant promise in biomedical applications, particularly regenerative medicine, due to their enhanced nutrient and waste permeability, improved cell permissibility, and minimal immunogenicity. However, traditional methods of generating porous hydrogels require secondary post‐processing steps or harmful reagents making simultaneous fabrication with bioactive factors and cells impossible. Therefore, a handheld printer is engineered for facile and continuous generation and deposition of hydrogel foams directly within the skin defect to form defect‐specific macroporous scaffolds. Within the handheld system, a temperature‐controlled microfluidic homogenizer is coupled with miniaturized liquid and air pumps to mix sterile air with gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) at the desired ratio. An integrated photocrosslinking unit is then utilized to crosslink the printed foam in situ to form scaffolds with controlled porosity. The system is optimized to form reliable and uniform GelMA foams. The resulting foam scaffolds demonstrate mechanical properties with excellent flexibility making them suitable for wound healing applications. The results of in vitro cell culture on the scaffolds demonstrate significantly increased cellular activity compared to the solid hydrogel. The in vivo printed foam scaffolds enhanced the rate and quality of wound healing in mice with full‐thickness wound without the use of biological materials.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

University of Connecticut

U.S. Department of Defense

Publisher

Wiley

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