Bioactive polymeric scaffolds for osteogenic repair and bone regenerative medicine.
Nazanin AmiryaghoubiMarziyeh FathiNader Noroozi PesyanMohammad SamieiJaleh BararYadollah OmidiPublished in: Medicinal research reviews (2020)
The loss of bone tissue is a striking challenge in orthopedic surgery. Tissue engineering using various advanced biofunctional materials is considered a promising approach for the regeneration and substitution of impaired bone tissues. Recently, polymeric supportive scaffolds and biomaterials have been used to rationally promote the generation of new bone tissues. To restore the bone tissue in this context, biofunctional polymeric materials with significant mechanical robustness together with embedded materials can act as a supportive matrix for cellular proliferation, adhesion, and osteogenic differentiation. The osteogenic regeneration to replace defective tissues demands greater calcium deposits, high alkaline phosphatase activity, and profound upregulation of osteocalcin as a late osteogenic marker. Ideally, the bioactive polymeric scaffolds (BPSs) utilized for bone tissue engineering should impose no detrimental impacts and function as a carrier for the controlled delivery and release of the loaded molecules necessary for the bone tissue regeneration. In this review, we provide comprehensive insights into different synthetic and natural polymers used for the regeneration of bone tissue and discuss various technologies applied for the engineering of BPSs and their physicomechanical properties and biological effects.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- bone mineral density
- drug delivery
- stem cells
- bone regeneration
- soft tissue
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone loss
- bone marrow
- gene expression
- cancer therapy
- escherichia coli
- signaling pathway
- minimally invasive
- autism spectrum disorder
- cell proliferation
- cystic fibrosis
- intellectual disability
- wound healing
- coronary artery bypass