Your Cart ()
cload

GUARANTEED SAFE & SECURE CHECKOUT

Spend $99.99 to Unlock Free Shipping within CONUS.

Piezoelectric Scaffold Boosts Cartilage Regeneration

By Conn Hastings January 25, 2022 0 comments

A team of researchers at the University of Connecticut have developed a biomaterial scaffold that generates small amounts of electricity when compressed. The piezoelectric material is intended to facilitate cartilage regeneration in joints. Normal movement of a joint in which the scaffold is implanted will create repeated small bursts of electricity. The researchers hypothesize that this electrical charge is a key component of cartilage healing, and helps to attract cells that will colonize and grow within the scaffold.

Cartilage regeneration is a highly active research area in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. This is because it tends to wear out relatively easily (particularly the cartilage that lines our joints), doesn’t heal itself very well, and is difficult to regenerate. Therefore, cartilage is a prime candidate for new and disruptive regenerative medical technologies.  

To date, researchers have tried all sorts of approaches to regrow cartilage, including growth factors and cells delivered within biomaterial scaffolds. However, the newly regenerated tissue doesn’t always behave as desired. “The regrown cartilage doesn’t behave like native cartilage. It breaks, under the normal stresses of the joint,” said Thanh Nguyen, one of the UConn researchers involved in the study.

Nguyen and colleagues have identified electricity as a previously underexplored factor in cartilage regeneration that may assist in the regeneration process. They decided to explore piezoelectric materials that can produce electricity in response to mechanical deformation, a process they say already occurs within the body. “Piezoelectricity is a phenomenon that also exists in the human body,” said Yang Liu, another developer of the new technology. “Bone, cartilage, collagen, DNA and various proteins have a piezoelectric response. Our approach to healing cartilage is highly clinically translational, and we will look into the related healing mechanism.”

Creating an implantable scaffold made from poly-L lactic acid (PLLA) nanofibers, the researchers implanted it into rabbits with injured knee cartilage. The PLLA material is typically used to stitch surgical incisions and it is also biodegradable, and so will eventually break down, allowing the new cartilage to replace it. It is also piezoelectric, and so requires movement to generate electricity.

The researchers allowed the rabbits to use a treadmill to encourage movement, and generate electricity within the injured cartilage. They observed that the treated rabbit knees demonstrated robust cartilage regeneration, and the new cartilage appeared to be mechanically strong and resistant to breaking down under normal movement.

See a video of one of the rabbits hopping on a treadmill post implantation (because why not?)

Study in Science Translational Medicine: Exercise-induced piezoelectric stimulation for cartilage regeneration in rabbits

Via: University of Connecticut


Older Post Newer Post

Newsletter

I agree to subscribe to updates from Shoptimized™

Categories

B. Dupont Purchased 1 minute ago from Los Angeles, CA
2
C. Santos Purchased 2 minutes ago from Chicago, IL
5.11 FLEX TacMed Pouch
D. Kim Purchased 2 minutes ago from Houston, TX
5.11 FLEX Tourniquet Pouch
E. García Purchased 2 minutes ago from Phoenix, AZ
5.11 UCR TacReady Headrest Pouch
F. Müller Purchased 2 minutes ago from Philadelphia, PA
Abdominal Aortic and Junctional Tourniquet-Stabilized (AAJT-S)
G. Rossi Purchased 2 minutes ago from San Antonio, TX
Adjustable Flange Nasopharyngeal Airway
H. Martinez Purchased 2 minutes ago from San Diego, CA
Adult Bag Valve Mask
J. López Purchased 2 minutes ago from Dallas, TX
Altama OTB Maritime Assault Boot - Low Height
K. Nowak Purchased 1 minute ago from San Jose, CA
Altama OTB Maritime Assault Boot - Mid Height
L. Müller Purchased 2 minutes ago from Austin, TX
AMBU Perfit ACE Adjustable Cervical Extrication Collar
M. Ivanova Purchased 2 minutes ago from Jacksonville, FL
Amphibious Trauma Kit
N. Andersen Purchased 1 minute ago from Fort Worth, TX
Army CLS Resupply Kit (CLS™)
O. Fischer Purchased 2 minutes ago from Columbus, OH
Backpack Accessory Pouch Kit - 4 Color
P. Bernard Purchased 2 minutes ago from Charlotte, NC
Ballistic Soft Panel for Plate Carrier
S. Schmidt Purchased 1 minute ago from San Francisco, CA
Bandage Fill Kit
T. Kowalski Purchased 1 minute ago from Indianapolis, IN
Bandage Shears
X. Martinez Purchased 2 minutes ago from Seattle, WA
Bard-Parker Safety Scalpel #10
Y. Ahmed Purchased 2 minutes ago from Denver, CO
Basic Field Surgical Airway Kit w/ET Tube
Z. Khan Purchased 2 minutes ago from Washington, DC
Beacon Chest Seal - Occlusive/Non-Vented
A. Ali Purchased 1 minute ago from Boston, MA