Reconstructing vascular networks promotes the repair of skeletal muscle following volumetric muscle loss by pre-vascularized tissue constructs

Author:

Chen Chih-Long12,Wei Shih-Yen3,Chen Wei-Lin3,Hsu Ting-Lun3,Chen Ying-Chieh3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dentistry, Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital, Taipei

2. School of Dental Technology, College of Oral Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei

3. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, National Tsing-Hua University, Hsinchu

Abstract

Current treatment for complex and large-scale volumetric muscle loss (VML) injuries remains a limited success and have substantial disadvantages, due to the irreversible loss of muscle mass, slow muscle regeneration, and rapid formation of non-functional fibrosis scars. These VML injuries are accompanied by denervation and the destruction of native vasculature which increases difficulties in the functional restoration of muscle. Here, reconstruction of the vascular network at the injury site was offered as a possible solution for improving the repair of muscle defects through the timely supply of nutrients and oxygen to surrounding cells. A hydrogel-based tissue construct containing various densities of the vascular network was successfully created in the subcutaneous space of mice by manipulating hydrogel properties, and then implanted into the VML injury site. One month after implantation, the mouse treated with the highly vascularized tissue had extensive muscle repair at the injury site and only spent a shorter time completing the inclined plane tests. These findings suggest that the reconstruction of the functional vascular network at the VML injury site accelerated muscle fiber repair through a timely supply of sufficient blood and avoided invasion by host fibroblasts.

Funder

Institute for Information Industry, Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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