In vitro and in vivo evaluation of chitosan scaffolds combined with simvastatin-loaded nanoparticles for guided bone regeneration.
Yan XueMingyao WuZongren LiuJinhua SongShuyu LuoHongjie LiYuan LiLichun JinBinbin GuanMingli LinFuyu ChenChenxin JinDeping LiuYanqiu LiXu ZhangPublished in: Journal of materials science. Materials in medicine (2019)
The objective of this study was to fabricate and characterize chitosan combined with different amounts of simvastatin-loaded nanoparticles and to investigate their potential for guided bone regeneration in vitro and in vivo. Different SIM-CSN formulations were combined into a chitosan scaffold (SIM-CSNs-S), and the morphology, simvastatin release profile, and effect on cell proliferation and differentiation were investigated. For in vivo experiments, ectopic osteogenesis and the critical-size cranial defect model in SD rats were chosen to evaluate bone regeneration potential. All three SIM-CSNs-S formulations had a porous structure and exhibited sustained simvastatin release. CSNs-S showed excellent degradation and biocompatibility characteristics. The 4 mg SIM-CSNs-S formulation stimulated higher BMSC ALP activity levels, demonstrated significantly earlier collagen enhancement, and led to faster bone regeneration than the other formulations. SIM-CSNs-S should have a significant effect on bone regeneration.