Abstract

Diabetic wounds are difficult to heal due to hampered vascularization and tissue regeneration. Wound dressings need frequent replacement and show limited effects on guiding tissue repair. Here, bio-inks containing sodium alginate (SA), oxidized sodium alginate (OSA), gelatin (Gel) and CaCO3 microspheres were prepared. To increase the printability, all bio-inks were pre-crosslinked with calcium ions (Ca2+). Porous hydrogel scaffolds with 4.43 ± 0.14 μm2 pore area and 184 ± 25 μm line diameter were fabricated via 3D printing. After lyophilization and swelling in PBS (pH 6.4), SA/OSA/Gel scaffold showed more excellent structural stability than SA and SA/Gel, which was attributed to the Schiff base reaction between OSA and Gel. NIH-3T3 cells on SA/OSA/Gel proliferated faster and showed better spreading morphology than those on SA and SA/Gel. After placed onto full-thickness wounds on SD rat back, SA/OSA/Gel scaffold guided tissue growth, integrated well with the regenerated tissue and accelerated wound healing, which promoted angiogenesis and showed 93.0 ± 2.5% of collagen deposition between degraded fragments of hydrogel scaffold. Taken together, porous hydrogel scaffolds fabricated via 3D printing bio-inks composed of SA, OSA, Gel and CaCO3 provide a potential strategy to improve diabetic wound healing.

Full Text
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