Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Reconstruction of abdominal wall with scaffolds of electrospun poly (l-lactide-co caprolactone) and porcine fibrinogen: An experimental study in the canine.
- Journal:
- Materials science & engineering. C, Materials for biological applications
- Year:
- 2020
- Authors:
- Li, Shaojie et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Surgery · China
- Species:
- dog
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of permanent synthetic materials for abdominal wall repair is currently the method of choice. However, they are not ideal as short-term and long-term complications have been reported for these materials including chronic groin pain (pain that lasted longer than 3 months), which occurred in 10-12% of patients, and host immunological responses to foreign body grafts. In the present randomized paired study we compared an electrospun composite scaffold composed of poly (l-lactide-co-caprolactone) [PLCL] blended with porcine fibrinogen (F-Fg) (PLCL/F-Fg), with a polypropylene mesh (PPM) as the control in a canine abdominal wall defect model (in 36 Beagle dogs). RESULTS: A blend ratio of 4:1 PLCL: F-Fg1 scaffold possessed optimal physical characteristics including shrinkage rate, mechanical strength, porosity and super-hydrophilic properties. Macroscopic, histological and biomechanical evaluations were performed over a period of 36 weeks and the results indicated that the resorbable PLCL/F-Fg1 electrospinning scaffold could effectively induce and augment abdominal skeletal muscle regeneration. The degradation rate of the PLCL/F-Fg1 scaffold and the rate of new tissue growth reached a balance and the biomechanical strength returned to baseline within 2 weeks of implantation. The immunohistological data demonstrated the presence of regenerated skeletal muscle tissue for PLCL/F-Fg1 scaffolds, whereas the PPM exhibited dense fibrous encapsulation along the perimeter of the mesh. CONCLUSIONS: The data provides the foundation for future clinical applications of PLCL/F-Fg1 composite scaffolds for reconstructive surgery of abdominal wall defects.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32204076/