Shape‐Configurable Mesh for Hernia Repair by Synchronizing Anisotropic Body Motion

Author:

Ha Hyunsu1ORCID,Lee Chan Hee1ORCID,Lee Kang Suk2,Lee Kyubae1,Park Jeongeun1,Kim Si Yeong1,Baek Sewoom3,Kang Mi‐Lan2,Lee Dong Won4,Sung Hak‐Joon132ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Engineering Yonsei University College of Medicine 50‐1 Yonsei‐ro, Seodaemun‐gu Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

2. TMD LAB Co. Ltd. 6th floor, 31, Gwangnaru‐ro 8‐gil, Seongdong‐gu Seoul 04799 Republic of Korea

3. Department of Brain Korea 21 FOUR Project for Medical Science and Medical Engineering Yonsei University College of Medicine 50‐1 Yonsei‐ro, Seodaemun‐gu Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

4. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Institute for Human Tissue Restoration Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractContinuous progress has been made in elucidating the relationship between material property, device design, and body function to develop surgical meshes. However, an unmet need still exists wherein the surgical mesh can handle the body motion and thereby promote the repair process. Here, the hernia mesh design and the advanced polymer properties are tailored to synchronize with the anisotropic abdominal motion through shape configuration. The thermomechanical property of shape configurable polymer enables molding of mesh shape to fit onto the abdominal structure upon temperature shift, followed by shape fixing with the release of the heat energy. The microstructural design of mesh is produced through finite element modeling to handle the abdominal motion efficiently through the anisotropic longitudinal and transverse directions. The design effects are validated through in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo mechanical analyses using a self‐configurable, body motion responsive (BMR) mesh. The regenerative function of BMR mesh leads to effective repair in a rat hernioplasty model by effectively handling the anisotropic abdomen motion. Subsequently, the device‐tissue integration is promoted by promoting healthy collagen synthesis with fibroblast‐to‐myofibroblast differentiation. This study suggests a potential solution to promote hernia repair by fine‐tuning the relationship between material property and mesh design.

Funder

Ministry of Food and Drug Safety

National Research Foundation

Korea Health Industry Development Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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