4.7 Article

3D Fiber Reinforced Hydrogel Scaffolds by Melt Electrowriting and Gel Casting as a Hybrid Design for Wound Healing

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202102068

Keywords

hybrid hydrogel scaffolds; melt electrowriting; wound healing

Funding

  1. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) [213M687]

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Emerging biomanufacturing technologies have revolutionized tissue engineering by developing hybrid designs for skin tissue engineering, which combine traditional wound dressing principles with advanced biofabrication methods. In this study, a hybrid design of fiber-reinforced scaffolds combined with gel casting is developed and shown to significantly enhance wound healing through the inclusion of growth factors and bioactive glass.
Emerging biomanufacturing technologies have revolutionized the field of tissue engineering by offering unprecedented possibilities. Over the past few years, new opportunities arose by combining traditional and novel fabrication techniques, shaping the hybrid designs in biofabrication. One of the potential application fields is skin tissue engineering, in which a combination of traditional principles of wound dressing with advanced biofabrication methods could yield more efficient therapies. In this study, a hybrid design of fiber-reinforced scaffolds combined with gel casting is developed and the efficiency for in vivo wound healing applications is assessed. For this purpose, 3D fiber meshes produced by melt electrowriting are selectively filled with photocrosslinkable gelatin hydrogel matrices loaded with different growth factor carrier microspheres. Additionally, the influence of the inclusion of inorganic bioactive glass particles within the composite fibrous mesh is evaluated. Qualitative evaluation of secondary wound healing criteria and histological analysis shows that hybrid scaffolds containing growth factors and bioactive glass enhances the healing process significantly, compared to the designs merely providing a fiber-reinforced bioactive hydrogel matrix as the wound dressing. This study aims to explore a new application area for melt electrowriting as a powerful tool in fabricating hybrid therapeutic designs for skin tissue engineering.

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