Accelerating Patterned Vascularization Using Granular Hydrogel Scaffolds and Surgical Micropuncture

Bulk hydrogel scaffolds are common in reconstructive surgery. They allow for the staged repair of soft tissue loss by providing a base for revascularization. Unfortunately, they are limited by both slow and random vascularization, which may manifest as treatment failure or suboptimal repair. Rapidly...

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Veröffentlicht in:Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) Germany), 2024-02, Vol.20 (8), p.e2307928-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Ataie, Zaman, Horchler, Summer, Jaberi, Arian, Koduru, Srinivas V., El‐Mallah, Jessica C., Sun, Mingjie, Kheirabadi, Sina, Kedzierski, Alexander, Risbud, Aneesh, Silva, Angelo Roncalli Alves E, Ravnic, Dino J., Sheikhi, Amir
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bulk hydrogel scaffolds are common in reconstructive surgery. They allow for the staged repair of soft tissue loss by providing a base for revascularization. Unfortunately, they are limited by both slow and random vascularization, which may manifest as treatment failure or suboptimal repair. Rapidly inducing patterned vascularization within biomaterials has profound translational implications for current clinical treatment paradigms and the scaleup of regenerative engineering platforms. To address this long‐standing challenge, a novel microsurgical approach and granular hydrogel scaffold (GHS) technology are co‐developed to hasten and pattern microvascular network formation. In surgical micropuncture (MP), targeted recipient blood vessels are perforated using a microneedle to accelerate cell extravasation and angiogenic outgrowth. By combining MP with an adjacent GHS with precisely tailored void space architecture, microvascular pattern formation as assessed by density, diameter, length, and intercapillary distance is rapidly guided. This work opens new translational opportunities for microvascular engineering, advancing reconstructive surgery, and regenerative medicine. Coordinated engineering (granular hydrogel scaffold) and surgical (micropuncture) approaches yield rapidly vascularized scaffolds with controllable microvascular patterns that may enable the development of new and translatable reconstructive and regenerative therapeutics.
ISSN:1613-6810
1613-6829
1613-6829
DOI:10.1002/smll.202307928