Soybean Oil-Based 3D Printed Mesh Designed for Guided Bone Regeneration (GBR) in Oral Surgery.
Mario BragagliaFrancesca SciarrettaPierfrancesco FileticiDaniele Lettieri-BarbatoLeonardo DassattiFabrizio NicolettiDiego SibiliaKatia AquilanoFrancesca NanniPublished in: Macromolecular bioscience (2024)
This study aims to obtain a cyto-compatible 3D printable bio-resin for the manufacturing of meshes designed from acquired real patients' bone defect to be used in future for guided bone regeneration (GBR), achieving the goal of personalized medicine, decreasing surgical, recovery time, and patient discomfort. To this purpose, a biobased, biocompatible, and photo-curable resin made of acrylated epoxidized soybean oil (AESO) diluted with soybean oil (SO) is developed and 3D printed using a commercial digital light processing (DLP) 3D printer. 3D printed samples show good thermal properties, allowing for thermally-based sterilization process and mechanical properties typical of crosslinked natural oils (i.e., E = 12 MPa, UTS = 1.5 MPa), suitable for the GBR application in the oral surgery. The AESO-SO bio-resin proves to be cytocompatible, allowing for fibroblast cells proliferation (viability at 72 h > 97%), without inducing severe inflammatory response when co-cultured with macrophages, as demonstrated by cytokine antibody arrays, that is anyway resolved in the first 24 h. Moreover, accelerated degradation tests prove that the bio-resin is biodegradable in hydrolytic environments.
Keyphrases
- bone regeneration
- minimally invasive
- inflammatory response
- coronary artery bypass
- end stage renal disease
- induced apoptosis
- fatty acid
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- signaling pathway
- case report
- endothelial cells
- current status
- toll like receptor
- coronary artery disease
- immune response
- patient reported outcomes
- soft tissue
- acute coronary syndrome
- postmenopausal women
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- percutaneous coronary intervention