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1.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 114: 104168, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33218928

ABSTRACT

Changes in the elastic properties of brain tissue have been correlated with injury, cancers, and neurodegenerative diseases. However, discrepancies in the reported elastic moduli of brain tissue are persistent, and spatial inhomogeneities complicate the interpretation of macroscale measurements such as rheology. Here we introduce needle induced cavitation rheology (NICR) and volume-controlled cavity expansion (VCCE) as facile methods to measure the apparent Young's modulus E of minimally manipulated brain tissue, at specific tissue locations and with sub-millimeter spatial resolution. For different porcine brain regions and sections analyzed by NICR, we found E to be 3.7 ± 0.7 kPa and 4.8 ± 1.0 kPa for gray matter, and white matter, respectively. For different porcine brain regions and sections analyzed by VCCE, we found E was 0.76 ± 0.02 kPa for gray matter and 0.92 ± 0.01 kPa for white matter. Measurements from VCCE were more similar to those obtained from macroscale shear rheology (0.75 ± 0.06 kPa) and from instrumented microindentation of white matter (0.97 ± 0.40 kPa) and gray matter (0.86 ± 0.20 kPa). We attributed the higher stiffness reported from NICR to that method's assumption of a cavitation instability due to a neo-Hookean constitutive response, which does not capture the strain-stiffening behavior of brain tissue under large strains, and therefore did not provide appropriate measurements. We demonstrate via both analytical modeling of a spherical cavity and finite element modeling of a needle geometry, that this strain stiffening may prevent a cavitation instability. VCCE measurements take this stiffening behavior into account by employing an incompressible one-term Ogden model to find the nonlinear elastic properties of the tissue. Overall, VCCE afforded rapid and facile measurement of nonlinear mechanical properties of intact, healthy mammalian brain tissue, enabling quantitative comparison among brain tissue regions and also between species. Finally, accurate estimation of elastic properties for this strain stiffening tissue requires methods that include appropriate constitutive models of the brain tissue response, which here are represented by inclusion of the Ogden model in VCCE.


Subject(s)
Brain , White Matter , Animals , Elastic Modulus , Gray Matter , Rheology , Swine
2.
PLoS One ; 13(10): e0204765, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30332434

ABSTRACT

Published data on the mechanical strength and elasticity of lung tissue is widely variable, primarily due to differences in how testing was conducted across individual studies. This makes it extremely difficult to find a benchmark modulus of lung tissue when designing synthetic extracellular matrices (ECMs). To address this issue, we tested tissues from various areas of the lung using multiple characterization techniques, including micro-indentation, small amplitude oscillatory shear (SAOS), uniaxial tension, and cavitation rheology. We report the sample preparation required and data obtainable across these unique but complimentary methods to quantify the modulus of lung tissue. We highlight cavitation rheology as a new method, which can measure the modulus of intact tissue with precise spatial control, and reports a modulus on the length scale of typical tissue heterogeneities. Shear rheology, uniaxial, and indentation testing require heavy sample manipulation and destruction; however, cavitation rheology can be performed in situ across nearly all areas of the lung with minimal preparation. The Young's modulus of bulk lung tissue using micro-indentation (1.4±0.4 kPa), SAOS (3.3±0.5 kPa), uniaxial testing (3.4±0.4 kPa), and cavitation rheology (6.1±1.6 kPa) were within the same order of magnitude, with higher values consistently reported from cavitation, likely due to our ability to keep the tissue intact. Although cavitation rheology does not capture the non-linear strains revealed by uniaxial testing and SAOS, it provides an opportunity to measure mechanical characteristics of lung tissue on a microscale level on intact tissues. Overall, our study demonstrates that each technique has independent benefits, and each technique revealed unique mechanical features of lung tissue that can contribute to a deeper understanding of lung tissue mechanics.


Subject(s)
Lung/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Elastic Modulus , Female , Freezing , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Lung Compliance/physiology , Male , Models, Biological , Respiratory Mechanics/physiology , Rheology/methods , Sus scrofa
3.
Carbohydr Polym ; 139: 131-8, 2016 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26794956

ABSTRACT

Electrospinning hydrophilic nanofiber mats that deliver hydrophobic agents would enable the development of new therapeutic wound dressings. However, the correlation between precursor solution properties and nanofiber morphology for polymer solutions electrospun with or without hydrophobic oils has not yet been demonstrated. Here, cinnamaldehyde (CIN) and hydrocinnamic alcohol (H-CIN) were electrospun in chitosan (CS)/poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) nanofiber mats as a function of CS molecular weight and degree of acetylation (DA). Viscosity stress sweeps determined how the oils affected solution viscosity and chain entanglement (Ce) concentration. Experimentally, the maximum polymer:oil mass ratio electrospun was 1:3 and 1:6 for CS/PEO:CIN and:H-CIN, respectively; a higher chitosan DA increased the incorporation of H-CIN only. The correlations determined for electrospinning plant-derived oils could potentially be applied to other hydrophobic molecules, thus broadening the delivery of therapeutics from electrospun nanofiber mats.


Subject(s)
Chitosan/chemistry , Nanofibers/chemistry , Oils, Volatile/chemistry , Polyethylene Glycols/chemistry , Acrolein/analogs & derivatives , Acrolein/chemistry , Alcohols/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Molecular Weight , Rheology , Solutions , Technology, Pharmaceutical , Viscosity
4.
J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 50: 299-307, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26189198

ABSTRACT

The current knowledge of bone marrow mechanics is limited to its viscous properties, neglecting the elastic contribution of the extracellular matrix. To get a more complete view of the mechanics of marrow, we characterized intact yellow porcine bone marrow using three different, but complementary techniques: rheology, indentation, and cavitation. Our analysis shows that bone marrow is elastic, and has a large amount of intra- and inter-sample heterogeneity, with an effective Young׳s modulus ranging from 0.25 to 24.7 kPa at physiological temperature. Each testing method was consistent across matched tissue samples, and each provided unique benefits depending on user needs. We recommend bulk rheology to capture the effects of temperature on tissue elasticity and moduli, indentation for quantifying local tissue heterogeneity, and cavitation rheology for mitigating destructive sample preparation. We anticipate the knowledge of bone marrow elastic properties for building in vitro models will elucidate mechanisms involved in disease progression and regenerative medicine.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow , Elastic Modulus , Materials Testing , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Rheology , Swine
5.
Biomacromolecules ; 16(6): 1837-43, 2015 Jun 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25932898

ABSTRACT

Biopolymer hydrogels are important materials for wound healing and cell culture applications. While current synthetic polymer hydrogels have excellent biocompatibility and are nontoxic, they typically function as a passive matrix that does not supply any additional bioactivity. Chitosan (CS) and pectin (Pec) are natural polymers with active properties that are desirable for wound healing. Unfortunately, the synthesis of CS/Pec materials have previously been limited by harsh acidic synthesis conditions, which further restricted their use in biomedical applications. In this study, a zero-acid hydrogel has been synthesized from a mixture of chitosan and pectin at biologically compatible conditions. For the first time, we demonstrated that salt could be used to suppress long-range electrostatic interactions to generate a thermoreversible biopolymer hydrogel that has temperature-sensitive gelation. Both the hydrogel and the solution phases are highly elastic, with a power law index of close to -1. When dried hydrogels were placed into phosphate buffered saline solution, they rapidly rehydrated and swelled to incorporate 2.7× their weight. As a proof of concept, we removed the salt from our CS/Pec hydrogels, thus, creating thick and easy to cast polyelectrolyte complex hydrogels, which proved to be compatible with human marrow-derived stem cells. We suggest that our development of an acid-free CS/Pec hydrogel system that has excellent exudate uptake, holds potential for wound healing bandages.


Subject(s)
Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Chitosan/chemistry , Hydrogels/chemistry , Pectins/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/adverse effects , Biocompatible Materials/chemical synthesis , Cell Line , Elasticity , Hot Temperature , Humans , Hydrogels/adverse effects , Hydrogels/chemical synthesis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/drug effects
6.
Langmuir ; 30(12): 3441-7, 2014 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24593694

ABSTRACT

Chronic wounds continue to be a global healthcare concern. Thus, the development of new nanoparticle-based therapies that treat multiple symptoms of these "non-healing" wounds without encouraging antibiotic resistance is imperative. One potential solution is to use chitosan, a naturally antimicrobial polycation, which can spontaneously form polyelectrolyte complexes when mixed with a polyanion in appropriate aqueous conditions. The requirement of at least two different polymers opens up the opportunity for us to form chitosan complexes with an additional functional polyanion. In this study, chitosan:pectin (CS:Pec) nanoparticles were synthesized using an aqueous spontaneous ionic gelation method. Systematically, a number of parameters, polymer concentration, addition order, mass ratio, and solution pH, were explored and their effect on nanoparticle formation was determined. The size and surface charge of the particles were characterized, as well as their morphology using transmission electron microscopy. The effect of polymer concentration and addition order on the nanoparticles was found to be similar to that of other chitosan:polyanion complexes. The mass ratio was tuned to create nanoparticles with a chitosan shell and a controllable positive zeta potential. The particles were stable in a pH range from 3.5 to 6.0 and lost stability after 14 days of storage in aqueous media. Due to the high positive surface charge of the particles, the innate properties of the polysaccharides used, and the harmless disassociation of the polyelectrolytes, we suggest that the development of these CS:Pec nanoparticles offers great promise as a chronic wound healing platform.


Subject(s)
Chitosan/chemistry , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Pectins/chemistry , Polymers/chemical synthesis , Electrolytes/chemical synthesis , Electrolytes/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Molecular Conformation , Particle Size , Polymers/chemistry , Surface Properties
7.
J Mater Chem B ; 1(36): 4531-4541, 2013 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32261196

ABSTRACT

Current strategies to treat chronic wounds offer limited relief to the 7.75 million patients who suffer from burns or chronic skin ulcers. Thus, as long as chronic wounds remain a global healthcare problem, the development of alternate treatments remain desperately needed. This review explores the recent strategies employed to tailor electrospun nanofiber mats towards accelerating the wound healing process. Porous nanofiber mats readily produced by the electrospinning process offer a promising solution to the management of wounds. The matrix chemistry, surface functionality, and mat degradation rate all can be fine-tuned to govern the interactions that occur at the materials-biology interface. In this review, first we briefly discuss the wound healing process and then highlight recent advances in drug release, biologics encapsulation, and antibacterial activity that have been demonstrated via electrospinning. While this versatile biomaterial has shown much progress, commercializing nanofiber mats that fully address the needs of an individual patient remains an ambitious challenge.

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