4.8 Article

Revealing the complexity of ultra-soft hydrogel re-swelling inside the brain

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 294, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2023.122024

Keywords

Hydrogel; Brain; Radiopaque hydrogel; Implant; Mechanics

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The study proposes a simple fabrication and processing sequence to deliver brain-like hydrogel implants into the nervous tissue. Real-time monitoring of hydrogel re-swelling kinetics in vivo is achieved using microcomputed tomography, and the study reveals how implant geometry and mechanical interplay govern in vivo buckling. These findings provide important guidance for the engineering of biomimetic brain implants.
The brain is an ultra-soft viscoelastic matrix. Sub-kPa hydrogels match the brain's mechanical properties but are challenging to manipulate in an implantable format. We propose a simple fabrication and processing sequence, consisting of de-hydration, patterning, implantation, and re-hydration steps, to deliver brain-like hydrogel implants into the nervous tissue. We monitored in real-time the ultra-soft hydrogel re-swelling kinetics in vivo using microcomputed tomography, achieved by embedding gold nanoparticles inside the hydrogel for contrast enhancement. We found that re-swelling in vivo strongly depends on the implant geometry and water availability at the hydrogel-tissue interface. Buckling of the implant inside the brain occurs when the soft implant is tethered to the cranium. Finite-element and analytical models reveal how the shank geometry, modulus and anchoring govern in vivo buckling. Taken together, these considerations on re-swelling kinetics of hydrogel constructs, implant geometry and soft implant-tissue mechanical interplay can guide the engineering of biomimetic brain implants.

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