Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues

Tissue engineering has the potential for repairing large bone defects, which impose a heavy financial burden on the public health. However, difficulties with O<sub>2</sub> delivery to the cells residing in the interior of tissue engineering scaffolds make it challenging to grow artificia...

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Main Authors: Thanh Danh Nguyen, Olufemi E. Kadri, Vassilios I. Sikavitsas, Roman S. Voronov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/11/2381
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spelling doaj-cb138ad981a9475db57e79bae59c25222020-11-25T00:16:48ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172019-06-01911238110.3390/app9112381app9112381Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone TissuesThanh Danh Nguyen0Olufemi E. Kadri1Vassilios I. Sikavitsas2Roman S. Voronov3Otto H. York Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USAOtto H. York Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USASchool of Chemical, Biological and Materials Engineering, University of Oklahoma Norman, OK 73019, USAOtto H. York Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USATissue engineering has the potential for repairing large bone defects, which impose a heavy financial burden on the public health. However, difficulties with O<sub>2</sub> delivery to the cells residing in the interior of tissue engineering scaffolds make it challenging to grow artificial tissues of clinically-relevant sizes. This study uses image-based simulation in order to provide insight into how to better optimize the scaffold manufacturing parameters, and the culturing conditions, in order to resolve the O<sub>2</sub> bottleneck. To do this, high resolution 3D X-ray images of two common scaffold types (salt leached foam and non-woven fiber mesh) are fed into Lattice Boltzmann Method fluid dynamics and reactive Lagrangian Scalar Tracking mass transfer solvers. The obtained findings indicate that the scaffolds should have maximal surface area-to-solid volume ratios for higher chances of the molecular collisions with the cells. Furthermore, the cell culture media should be flown through the scaffold pores as fast as practically possible (without detaching or killing the cells). Finally, we have provided a parametric sweep that maps how the molecular transport within the scaffolds is affected by variations in rates of O<sub>2</sub> consumption by the cells. Ultimately, the results of this study are expected to benefit the computer-assisted design of tissue engineering scaffolds and culturing experiments.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/11/2381oxygen deliveryoptimizationmass transfertransportbone tissue engineeringcomputational fluid dynamicsLattice Boltzmann methodscaffold designculturing protocolLagrangian scalar tracking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thanh Danh Nguyen
Olufemi E. Kadri
Vassilios I. Sikavitsas
Roman S. Voronov
spellingShingle Thanh Danh Nguyen
Olufemi E. Kadri
Vassilios I. Sikavitsas
Roman S. Voronov
Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
Applied Sciences
oxygen delivery
optimization
mass transfer
transport
bone tissue engineering
computational fluid dynamics
Lattice Boltzmann method
scaffold design
culturing protocol
Lagrangian scalar tracking
author_facet Thanh Danh Nguyen
Olufemi E. Kadri
Vassilios I. Sikavitsas
Roman S. Voronov
author_sort Thanh Danh Nguyen
title Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
title_short Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
title_full Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
title_fullStr Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
title_full_unstemmed Scaffolds with a High Surface Area-to-Volume Ratio and Cultured Under Fast Flow Perfusion Result in Optimal O<sub>2</sub> Delivery to the Cells in Artificial Bone Tissues
title_sort scaffolds with a high surface area-to-volume ratio and cultured under fast flow perfusion result in optimal o<sub>2</sub> delivery to the cells in artificial bone tissues
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Tissue engineering has the potential for repairing large bone defects, which impose a heavy financial burden on the public health. However, difficulties with O<sub>2</sub> delivery to the cells residing in the interior of tissue engineering scaffolds make it challenging to grow artificial tissues of clinically-relevant sizes. This study uses image-based simulation in order to provide insight into how to better optimize the scaffold manufacturing parameters, and the culturing conditions, in order to resolve the O<sub>2</sub> bottleneck. To do this, high resolution 3D X-ray images of two common scaffold types (salt leached foam and non-woven fiber mesh) are fed into Lattice Boltzmann Method fluid dynamics and reactive Lagrangian Scalar Tracking mass transfer solvers. The obtained findings indicate that the scaffolds should have maximal surface area-to-solid volume ratios for higher chances of the molecular collisions with the cells. Furthermore, the cell culture media should be flown through the scaffold pores as fast as practically possible (without detaching or killing the cells). Finally, we have provided a parametric sweep that maps how the molecular transport within the scaffolds is affected by variations in rates of O<sub>2</sub> consumption by the cells. Ultimately, the results of this study are expected to benefit the computer-assisted design of tissue engineering scaffolds and culturing experiments.
topic oxygen delivery
optimization
mass transfer
transport
bone tissue engineering
computational fluid dynamics
Lattice Boltzmann method
scaffold design
culturing protocol
Lagrangian scalar tracking
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/11/2381
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