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Characterization of the Microarchitecture of Direct Writing Melt Electrospun Tissue Engineering Scaffolds Using Diffusion Tensor and Computed Tomography Microimaging
Author(s) -
Sean K. Powell,
Nikola Ristovski,
Sam Liao,
Keith A. Blackwood,
Maria A. Woodruff,
Konstantin I. Momot
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
3d printing and additive manufacturing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.917
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 2329-7670
pISSN - 2329-7662
DOI - 10.1089/3dp.2013.0011
Subject(s) - diffusion mri , thermal diffusivity , materials science , anisotropy , diffusion , electrospinning , anisotropic diffusion , fiber , characterization (materials science) , scaffold , tensor (intrinsic definition) , tissue engineering , perpendicular , polymer , biomedical engineering , nanotechnology , magnetic resonance imaging , composite material , optics , geometry , physics , medicine , mathematics , quantum mechanics , radiology , thermodynamics
This article describes the first steps toward comprehensive characterization of molecular transport within scaffolds for tissue engineering. The scaffolds were fabricated using a novel melt electrospinning technique capable of constructing 3D lattices of layered polymer fibers with well - defined internal microarchitectures. The general morphology and structure order was then determined using T 2 - weighted magnetic resonance imaging and X - ray microcomputed tomography. Diffusion tensor microimaging was used to measure the time - dependent diffusivity and diffusion anisotropy within the scaffolds. The measured diffusion tensors were anisotropic and consistent with the cross - hatched geometry of the scaffolds: diffusion was least restricted in the direction perpendicular to the fiber layers. The results demonstrate that the cross - hatched scaffold structure preferentially promotes molecular transport vertically through the layers ( z - axis), with more restricted diffusion in the directions of the fiber layers ( x – y plane). Diffusivity in the x – y plane was observed to be invariant to the fiber thickness. The characteristic pore size of the fiber scaffolds can be probed by sampling the diffusion tensor at multiple diffusion times. Prospective application of diffusion tensor imaging for the real - time monitoring of tissue maturation and nutrient transport pathways within tissue engineering scaffolds is discussed

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