Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications

Lung diseases, cancers, and trauma can result in injury to the connective tissue lining the lung, i.e., the pleura. Pleural injuries lead to pneumothoraxes or pleural effusions, i.e., air or fluid leaking out of the lung respectively, and potential lung collapse - an immediately life threatening con...

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Main Author: Charron, Patrick Nelson
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks @ UVM 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/454
http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1453&context=graddis
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spelling ndltd-uvm.edu-oai-scholarworks.uvm.edu-graddis-14532017-03-17T08:44:36Z Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications Charron, Patrick Nelson Lung diseases, cancers, and trauma can result in injury to the connective tissue lining the lung, i.e., the pleura. Pleural injuries lead to pneumothoraxes or pleural effusions, i.e., air or fluid leaking out of the lung respectively, and potential lung collapse - an immediately life threatening condition. While several bioengineered soft tissue sealants exist on the market, there is only one sealant FDA-approved for use in pulmonary surgery. In addition, very limited techniques are presented in the literature for characterizing the burst properties of hydrogel tissue sealants. For my thesis, I proposed to develop a protocol for characterizing the burst properties of hydrogel sealants using a novel burst pressure test chamber. I further proposed a novel combination of oxidation and methacrylation reactions of alginate for tissue sealant applications, with a particular focus on developing a pulmonary sealant. The proposed research objectives are: 1) To develop protocol for testing hydrogel sealants for soft tissue applications; 2) To verify alginate as a potential for tissue sealant applications; and 3) To optimize an alginate hydrogel sealant and perform ex vivo analysis for a pleural sealant application. Alginate materials with varying degrees of oxidation and methacrylation were synthesized and characterized. Oscillatory rheometry was used to characterize material properties such as viscosity, hydrogel gelation kinetics, and complex moduli. Burst pressure measurements properties and failure mechanisms, i.e. delamination or material failure, were collected for a liquid and dry-state application. Preliminary ex vivo mouse lung model testing demonstrated that methacrylated alginate hydrogels are able to withstand physiological pressures associated with breathing, and failure occurs within the hydrogel for adhesive alginate-based tissue sealants. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/454 http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1453&context=graddis Graduate College Dissertations and Theses en ScholarWorks @ UVM Alginate Burst Pressure Methacrylation Oxidation Tissue Sealant Visible Light Crosslinking Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering Mechanical Engineering Polymer Chemistry
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Alginate
Burst Pressure
Methacrylation
Oxidation
Tissue Sealant
Visible Light Crosslinking
Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering
Mechanical Engineering
Polymer Chemistry
spellingShingle Alginate
Burst Pressure
Methacrylation
Oxidation
Tissue Sealant
Visible Light Crosslinking
Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering
Mechanical Engineering
Polymer Chemistry
Charron, Patrick Nelson
Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
description Lung diseases, cancers, and trauma can result in injury to the connective tissue lining the lung, i.e., the pleura. Pleural injuries lead to pneumothoraxes or pleural effusions, i.e., air or fluid leaking out of the lung respectively, and potential lung collapse - an immediately life threatening condition. While several bioengineered soft tissue sealants exist on the market, there is only one sealant FDA-approved for use in pulmonary surgery. In addition, very limited techniques are presented in the literature for characterizing the burst properties of hydrogel tissue sealants. For my thesis, I proposed to develop a protocol for characterizing the burst properties of hydrogel sealants using a novel burst pressure test chamber. I further proposed a novel combination of oxidation and methacrylation reactions of alginate for tissue sealant applications, with a particular focus on developing a pulmonary sealant. The proposed research objectives are: 1) To develop protocol for testing hydrogel sealants for soft tissue applications; 2) To verify alginate as a potential for tissue sealant applications; and 3) To optimize an alginate hydrogel sealant and perform ex vivo analysis for a pleural sealant application. Alginate materials with varying degrees of oxidation and methacrylation were synthesized and characterized. Oscillatory rheometry was used to characterize material properties such as viscosity, hydrogel gelation kinetics, and complex moduli. Burst pressure measurements properties and failure mechanisms, i.e. delamination or material failure, were collected for a liquid and dry-state application. Preliminary ex vivo mouse lung model testing demonstrated that methacrylated alginate hydrogels are able to withstand physiological pressures associated with breathing, and failure occurs within the hydrogel for adhesive alginate-based tissue sealants.
author Charron, Patrick Nelson
author_facet Charron, Patrick Nelson
author_sort Charron, Patrick Nelson
title Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
title_short Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
title_full Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
title_fullStr Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
title_full_unstemmed Burst Pressure Properties and Ex Vivo Analysis of Alginate-Based Hydrogels for Tissue Sealant Applications
title_sort burst pressure properties and ex vivo analysis of alginate-based hydrogels for tissue sealant applications
publisher ScholarWorks @ UVM
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/454
http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1453&context=graddis
work_keys_str_mv AT charronpatricknelson burstpressurepropertiesandexvivoanalysisofalginatebasedhydrogelsfortissuesealantapplications
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