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Reduction of protein adsorption and macrophage and astrocyte adhesion on ventricular catheters by polyethylene glycol and N ‐acetyl‐ L ‐cysteine
Author(s) -
Harris Carolyn A.,
Resau James H.,
Hudson Eric A.,
West Richard A.,
Moon Candice,
Black Andrew D.,
McAllister James P.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of biomedical materials research part a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.849
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1552-4965
pISSN - 1549-3296
DOI - 10.1002/jbm.a.33130
Subject(s) - polyethylene glycol , materials science , protein adsorption , adsorption , cysteine , adhesion , astrocyte , reduction (mathematics) , polyethylene , biomedical engineering , nuclear chemistry , composite material , biochemistry , organic chemistry , polymer , biology , medicine , chemistry , neuroscience , enzyme , geometry , mathematics , central nervous system
Cellular obstruction of poly(dimethyl)siloxane (PDMS) catheters is one of the most prevalent causes of shunt failure in the treatment of hydrocephalus. By modifying PDMS using short‐ and long‐chain mono‐functional polyethylene glycol (PEG604 and PEG5K, respectively) and N ‐acetyl‐ L ‐cysteine via adsorption and covalent binding (NAC and NAC/EDC/NHS, respectively), we increased surface wettability. We hypothesized that these surface modifications would inhibit protein adsorption and decrease host macrophage and astrocyte adhesion. Tested in a bioreactor set to mimic physiological flow, all modified surfaces significantly decreased albumin adsorption compared with PDMS ( p < 0.05) except for PEG604‐modified PDMS ( p = 0.14). All four modification strategies significantly reduced ( p < 0.01) fibronectin adsorption. PEG604, PEG5K, NAC, and NAC/EDC/NHS reduced the average level of macrophage adhesion by 53%, 63%, 40%, and 58% ( p <.0.05 except when comparing PDMS with NAC) and astrocyte adhesion by 47%, 83%, 91%, and 72% ( p < 0.05 except when comparing PDMS with PEG604), respectively. Combined with saline soak results which suggest that the surface wettability is stable over 30 days for each modification, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that these modifications decrease cell adhesion on catheters in vitro for the treatment of hydrocephalus. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A, 2011.