4.5 Article

Flow inside a bone scaffold: Visualization using 3D phase contrast MRI and comparison with numerical simulations

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 126, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2021.110625

Keywords

Bone scaffold; MRI visualization; Interstitial fluid flow

Funding

  1. NSF [CBET 1605060]

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This study developed a flow visualization method using Phase-Contrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (PC-MRI) to measure flow velocities within a 3D-printed microCT-based rendering of a bone scaffold. The experimental results showed quantitative agreement between numerically and experimentally observed flow velocities at different slices of the scaffold, demonstrating the validity of this experimental approach for validating numerical studies and gaining insight into flow behavior inside tissue-engineered scaffolds.
We report on results of experimental flow measurements inside a bone scaffold model, subjected to a uniform incoming flow (applied perfusion). Understanding the flow behavior inside a tissue engineered scaffold is essential for mechanistic studies of mechanobiology, particularly flow-sensitive bone cells. Nearly all existing studies that quantify interstitial flow inside engineered bone scaffolds have been based on numerical results, in part due to the difficulties associated with quantitative measurements and visualization of flow inside large, opaque bone or bone mimics. Thus, an experimental platform to complement and validate in silico studies is needed. Therefore, we developed a flow visualization method using Phase-Contrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (PC-MRI) to measure flow velocities within a 3D-printed microCT-based rendering of a bone scaffold. We designed and built a non-magnetic recirculating water tunnel to apply uniform perfusion to the 3D-printed model and we measured flow distribution within the scaffold and compared these experimental results with CFD results. Both magnitude and distribution of flow velocities observed at different slices of the scaffold were in quantitative agreement numerically and experimentally. This experimental approach can be used to both validate numerical studies and provide insight into the flow behavior inside tissue-engineered scaffolds for a range of applications, including fundamental mechanobiology of healthy cells, and in the context of diseases, such as cancer.

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