Primers for the Adhesion of Gellan Gum-Based Hydrogels to the Cartilage: A Comparative Study.
Diego TruccoLaura RiacciLorenzo VannozziCristina ManferdiniLorenzo ArricoElena GabusiGina LisignoliLeonardo RicottiPublished in: Macromolecular bioscience (2022)
A stable adhesion to the cartilage is a crucial requisite for hydrogels used for cartilage regeneration. Indeed, a weak interface between the tissue and the implanted material may produce a premature detachment and thus the failure of the regeneration processes. Fibrin glue, cellulose nanofibers and catecholamines have been proposed in the state-of-the-art as primers to improve the adhesion. However, no studies focused on a systematic comparison of their performance. This work aims to evaluate the adhesion strength between ex vivo cartilage specimens and polysaccharide hydrogels (gellan gum and methacrylated gellan gum), by applying the mentioned primers as intermediate layer. Results show that the fibrin glue and the cellulose nanofibers improve the adhesion strength, while catecholamines do not guarantee reaching a clinically acceptable value. Stem cells embedded in gellan gum hydrogels reduce the adhesion strength when fibrin glue is used as a primer, being anyhow still sufficient for in vivo applications.