Abstract

Due to the rise in cardiovascular disease and the problem of autologous transplant limitation, the emergence of 3D bioprinted blood vessels using natural polymer materials as ink is becoming increasingly important in the field of small-diameter artificial blood vessels (φ ≤ 6 mm). In this paper, gelatin was firstly adopted to explore alginate/chitosan composite hydrogel properties and solve the current issues of poor mechanical performance and suboptimal printability of small-diameter blood vessels, which indicated that the modification caused a 17.7 % increase in compressive strength and a 63.2 % enhancement in tensile properties. The material microstructure evaluation showed that the samples with gelatin(4 %) presented the excellent water absorption rate(>90 %) significantly increasing their porosities. A self-developed 3D bioprinter was utilized to clarify the controllable mechanism of small-diameter artificial blood vessel, which has superior performance and excellent printability. This study provides a new reference solution to the current challenges in the bio-ink performance and printability of small-diameter artificial blood vessels.

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