Abstract

Hemocompatibility, anti-inflammation and anti-thrombogenicity of acellular synthetic vascular grafts remains a challenge in biomaterials design. Using electrospun polycaprolactone (PCL) fibers as a template, a coating of polypyrrole (PPy) was successfully polymerized onto the fiber surface. The fibers coated with heparin-doped PPy (PPy-HEP) demonstrated better electroactivity, lower surface resistivity (9–10-fold) and better anti-coagulation response (non-observable plasma recalcification after 30min vs. recalcification at 8–9min) as compared to fibers coated with pristine PPy. Red blood cell compatibility, measured by% hemolysis, was greatly improved on PPy-HEP-coated PCL in comparison to uncoated PCL (3.9±2.1% vs. 22.1±4.1%). PPy-HEP-coated PCL fibers also exhibited higher stiffness values (6.8±0.9MPa vs. 4.2±0.8MPa) as compared to PCL fibers, but similar tensile strengths. It was also observed that the application of a low alternating current led to a 4-fold reduction of platelet activation (as quantitated by CD62p expression) for the PPy-HEP-coated fibers as compared to non-stimulated conditions. In parallel, a reduction in the leukocyte adhesion to both pristine PPy-coated and PPy-HEP-coated fibers was observable with AC stimulation. Overall, a new strategy involving the use of hemocompatible conducting polymers and electrical stimulation to control thrombogenicity and inflammatory responses for synthetic vascular graft designs was demonstrated.

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