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Photooxidation crosslinking to recover residual stress in decellularized blood vessel
Author(s) -
Jintao Wang,
Lingwen Kong,
Alidha Gafur,
Xiaobo Peng,
Natalia Kristi,
Jing Xu,
Xingshuang Ma,
Nan Wang,
Rose Humphry,
Colm Durkan,
Haijun Zhang,
Zhiyi Ye,
Guixue Wang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
regenerative biomaterials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.166
H-Index - 25
ISSN - 2056-3426
DOI - 10.1093/rb/rbaa058
Subject(s) - decellularization , glutaraldehyde , residual stress , blood vessel , biomedical engineering , scanning electron microscope , materials science , transmission electron microscopy , chemistry , composite material , tissue engineering , nanotechnology , medicine , chromatography , psychiatry
Decellularization method based on trypsin-digestion is widely used to construct small diameter vascular grafts. However, this method will reduce the opening angle of the blood vessel and result in the reduction of residual stress. Residual stress reduced has an adverse effect on the compliance and permeability of small diameter vascular grafts. To improve the situation, acellular blood vessels were treated with glutaraldehyde and photooxidation crosslinking respectively, and the changes of opening angle, circumferential residual strain of native blood vessels, decellularized arteries and crosslinked blood vessels were measured by means of histological examination, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) in this study. The opening angle of decellularized arteries significantly restored after photooxidation crosslinking ( P  = 0.0216), while that of glutaraldehyde crosslinking blood vessels reduced. The elastic fibers inside the blood vessels became densely rearranged after photooxidation crosslinking. The results of finite element simulation showed that the residual stress increased with the increase of opening angle. In this study, we found at the first time that photooxidation crosslinking method could significantly increase the residual stress of decellularized vessels, which provides biomechanical support for the development of new biomaterials of vascular grafts.

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