Xylan hemicellulose improves chitosan hydrogel for bone tissue regeneration.
Joshua R BushHaixiang LiangMolly DickinsonEdward A BotchweyPublished in: Polymers for advanced technologies (2016)
The hemicellulose xylan, which has immunomodulatory effects, has been combined with chitosan to form a composite hydrogel to improve the healing of bone fractures. This thermally responsive and injectable hydrogel, which is liquid at room temperature and gels at physiological temperature, improves the response of animal host tissue compared with similar pure chitosan hydrogels in tissue engineering models. The composite hydrogel was placed in a subcutaneous model where the composite hydrogel is replaced by host tissue within 1 week, much earlier than chitosan hydrogels. A tibia fracture model in mice showed that the composite encourages major remodeling of the fracture callus in less than 4 weeks. A non-union fracture model in rat femurs was used to demonstrate that the composite hydrogel allows bone regeneration and healing of defects that with no treatment are unhealed after 6 weeks. These results suggest that the xylan/chitosan composite hydrogel is a suitable bone graft substitute able to aid in the repair of large bone defects.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- wound healing
- bone regeneration
- cancer therapy
- room temperature
- bone mineral density
- drug release
- stem cells
- soft tissue
- bone loss
- oxidative stress
- randomized controlled trial
- ionic liquid
- type diabetes
- postmenopausal women
- hip fracture
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- replacement therapy
- extracellular matrix
- combination therapy
- gestational age
- study protocol