Abstract
Bone is a dynamic, living tissue that exists and renews itself continuously in a 3D manner. Nevertheless, complex clinical conditions require a bone substitute to replace the defective bone and/or accelerate bone healing. Bone tissue engineering aims to treat bone defects that fail to heal on their own. Electrospinning provides an opportunity to create nano- to micro-fibrous scaffolds that mimic the architecture of the natural extracellular matrix (ECM) with high porosity and large specific surface area. Despite these advantages, traditional electrospun meshes can only provide a 2D architecture for cell attachment and proliferation rather than the 3D attachment in native tissue. Fabrication of 3D electrospun scaffolds for bone tissue regeneration is a challenging task, which has attracted significant attention over the past couple of decades. This review highlights recent strategies used to produce 3D electrospun/co-electrospun scaffolds for bone tissue applications describing the materials and procedures. It also considers combining conventional and coaxial electrospinning with other scaffold manufacturing techniques to produce 3D structures which have the potential to engineer missing bone in the human body.Graphical abstract[Formula: see text].
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More From: Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine
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