Abstract

In the presented paper authors describe a method for bone scaffolds fabrication. The technique is based on the agglomeration of chitosan microspheres. The fabrication process is complex and consists of a few steps: chitosan spheres extrusion, scaffold formation by compression followed by the spheres agglomeration and bonding with cross-linking agent (STPP, sodium tripolyphosphate). The described method allows manufacturing of porous materials with controllable shape, pore size distribution and their interconnectivity. In this technique 3D scaffold porosity can be regulated by altering spheres diameter. Authors studied influence of cross-linker concentrations and time of cross-linking process on the scaffold morphology, mechanical properties, enzymatic degradation rate (in the presence of lysozyme) and human osteoblasts response. Surface morphology and topography were evaluated by SEM. Porosity and pore interconnectivity were observed via μCT scanning. Mechanical tests showed that chitosan scaffolds perform compression characteristic (Young Modulus) similar to natural bone. Cytotoxicity established by XTT assay confirmed that most of the developed composite materials do not show toxic properties. Osteoblast adhesion and morphology were analyzed by SEM and optical microscopy.

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