Skip to Main Content

Latest News

January 24, 2007

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Woven Scaffold Mimics Cartilage

Biodegradable scaffold could improve joint replacements

Celia Henry Arnaud

Researchers at Duke University and MIT have developed a three-dimensional weaving technique for making biodegradable scaffolds that mimic the properties of natural cartilage (Nat. Mater., DOI: 10.1038/nmat1822).

NATURE MATERIALS ©2007
View Enlarged Image

Duke's Farshid Guilak and coworkers use a custom-built loom to weave the scaffolds (shown) from alternating layers of polyglycolic acid yarn oriented perpendicularly to one another. A third set of fibers winds around the layers, locking the structure together. By changing the number of fibers in each layer, Guilak's group can control the scaffold's mechanical properties.

Next, the researchers create a composite material by combining the woven material with a biocompatible hydrogel—either agarose or fibrin—and seed that composite with cartilage cells. Even before the cells are added, the scaffold has mechanical properties similar to those of cartilage. This opens the possibility of developing implants that support the growth of cartilage inside of a patient, rather than having to first grow the replacement cartilage in cultures before implantation.

Chemical & Engineering News
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society

Login

Member ID:

Password:

Questions or Problems?

Adjust text size:

A- A+

Articles By Topic