Abstract
When treating orthopaedic damage or illness and accidental fracture, bone grafting remains the gold standard of treatment. In cases where this approach doesn't seem achievable, bone tissue engineering can offer scaffolding as a substitute. Defective and fractured bone tissue is extracted and substituted with porous scaffold structures to aid in the process of tissue regeneration. Three-dimensional bioprinting has demonstrated enormous promise in recent years for producing scaffold structures with the necessary capabilities. In order to create composite biomaterial inks for three-dimensional bioprinting, four different materials were combined such as silk fibroin, bone particles (B), synthetic biopolymer poly (ε-caprolactone), and Fenugreek (F). These biomaterials were mixed together in certain proportion to develop a silk fibroin + bovine bone + polycaprolactone + fenugreek powder composites biomaterial which was later three-dimensional bioprinted to fabricated composite bio-scaffold. The biomechanical, structural, and biological elements of the manufactured composite scaffolds were characterized in order to determine their suitability as a possible biomaterial for the production of bone tissue. The in vitro bioactivity of the composite scaffolds was assessed in the simulated body fluids, and the swelling and degradation characteristics of the two developed scaffolds were analyzed separately over time. The results showed that the mechanical durability of the composite scaffolds was enhanced by the bovine bone particles, up to a specific concentration in the silk fibroin matrix. Furthermore, the incorporation of bone particles improved the bioactive composite scaffolds’ capacity to generate hydroxyapatite in vitro. The combined findings show that the three-dimensional printed bio-composites scaffolds have the required mechanical strength and may be applied to regeneration of bone tissue and restoration, since they resemble the characteristics of native bone.
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More From: Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part L: Journal of Materials: Design and Applications
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