Abstract

Tissue engineering is a set of techniques for producing or reconstructing tissue that primarily aims to restore or improve the function of tissues in the human body. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the mechanical and histological characteristics of decellularized tracheal scaffolds prepared in comparison with fresh trachea for use in tracheal repair. In order to prepare the scaffold, sheep's trachea was prepared and after cleaning the waste tissues, they were decellularized. Then decellularized scaffolds were evaluated histologically and laboratory and numerical study of the nonlinear mechanical behavior of tracheal tissue and scaffold and their comparison. Examining the results of histological evaluations showed that the decellularization of the scaffolds was completely done. These results were confirmed by hematoxylin-eosin staining. Also, the exact hyperelastic properties of tracheal tissue and scaffold were used in biomechanical models, and according to the presented results, the five-term Mooney-Rivlin strain energy density function became a suitable behavioral model for modeling the hyperelastic behavior of trachea and scaffold. In total, the results of this research showed that the scaffolds obtained from decellularization by preserving the main compositions of the desired tissue can be a suitable platform for investigating cell behaviors.

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