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    Design of an Endoreactor for the Cultivation of a Joint-Like-Structure

    Source: Journal of Medical Devices:;2009:;volume( 003 ):;issue: 002::page 27527
    Author:
    J. H. Kuiper
    ,
    E. May
    ,
    T. Grünhagen
    ,
    T. Douglas
    ,
    I. Z. Martinez
    ,
    O. Johansen
    ,
    P. H. Warnke
    ,
    J. Urban
    ,
    J. L. Herder
    ,
    S. Roberts
    ,
    S. Sivananthan
    ,
    J. B. Richardson
    DOI: 10.1115/1.3147270
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: To avoid revision surgeries in artificial joint replacements and to allow young people to have a joint replacement, using biological joint replacement created by tissue engineering is a promising alternative. Several research groups have tissue engineered bone [Warnke 2004] and cartilage [Chung 2007] separately. The tissue engineering of a joint, consisting of bone and cartilage is the next frontier. The present study focuses on the design of a novel device, named Endoreactor, that is employing the mechanosensitivity of cells to create a joint-like-structure (JLS) consisting of a bone and cartilage sandwich, similar to an amphiarthrosis, by applying a mechanical loading regime to a stem cell seeded scaffold construct during endocultivation. This way, the patients who will eventually need the new joint will serve as their own bioreactor, having the joint grow in their own body. In the JLS, the outside layers are designed to become bone, using a 6 mm thick scaffold with high stiffness. The center layer is a 4 mm thick scaffold which is compliant so as to experience more strain than the outside scaffolds to stimulate cartilage formation. Compression is realized by placing the JLSs between the long links of a kite-shaped four-bar linkage. This Endoreactor is powered by natural body motion through connection to the musculoskeletal system of the host, which in the experimental phase is a Gottingen minipig. The loading frequency and rest versus active time is dictated by the activity level of the minipig. This results in a natural loading pattern that is employed for the stimulation of cartilage formation in the JLS. A tensile force created during ambulation is converted into compressive action between the two long links of the mechanism. A mechanical stop limits the motion. This way controlled intermittent dynamic compression between 2.5% and 12.5% is realized in the cartilage layer of the JLS. All functions are integrated into a single piece compliant mechanism which is produced out of titanium using 3D rapid prototyping by selective laser melting technology. The mechanism can be fitted with cages that hold the scaffolds for bone and cartilage in place and protect them from external loads while being implanted. A safety spring was added to accommodate for large actuation excursions. A number of prototypes were produced and tested for fatigue, plastic deformation, failure load, and displacements of the long links at the JLS locations under different axial loads. These tests confirmed the proper mechanical functioning of the Endoreactor. Work with animal models making use of the device to culture an amphiarthosis-like joint is foreseen in the near future. This work was carried out at part of MYJOINT: Living Bioreactor—Growing a New Joint in a Human Back, EU FP6-2004-NEST-C-1, Proposal No. 028861.
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      Design of an Endoreactor for the Cultivation of a Joint-Like-Structure

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    contributor authorJ. H. Kuiper
    contributor authorE. May
    contributor authorT. Grünhagen
    contributor authorT. Douglas
    contributor authorI. Z. Martinez
    contributor authorO. Johansen
    contributor authorP. H. Warnke
    contributor authorJ. Urban
    contributor authorJ. L. Herder
    contributor authorS. Roberts
    contributor authorS. Sivananthan
    contributor authorJ. B. Richardson
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:34:44Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:34:44Z
    date copyrightJune, 2009
    date issued2009
    identifier issn1932-6181
    identifier otherJMDOA4-28002#027527_2.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/141596
    description abstractTo avoid revision surgeries in artificial joint replacements and to allow young people to have a joint replacement, using biological joint replacement created by tissue engineering is a promising alternative. Several research groups have tissue engineered bone [Warnke 2004] and cartilage [Chung 2007] separately. The tissue engineering of a joint, consisting of bone and cartilage is the next frontier. The present study focuses on the design of a novel device, named Endoreactor, that is employing the mechanosensitivity of cells to create a joint-like-structure (JLS) consisting of a bone and cartilage sandwich, similar to an amphiarthrosis, by applying a mechanical loading regime to a stem cell seeded scaffold construct during endocultivation. This way, the patients who will eventually need the new joint will serve as their own bioreactor, having the joint grow in their own body. In the JLS, the outside layers are designed to become bone, using a 6 mm thick scaffold with high stiffness. The center layer is a 4 mm thick scaffold which is compliant so as to experience more strain than the outside scaffolds to stimulate cartilage formation. Compression is realized by placing the JLSs between the long links of a kite-shaped four-bar linkage. This Endoreactor is powered by natural body motion through connection to the musculoskeletal system of the host, which in the experimental phase is a Gottingen minipig. The loading frequency and rest versus active time is dictated by the activity level of the minipig. This results in a natural loading pattern that is employed for the stimulation of cartilage formation in the JLS. A tensile force created during ambulation is converted into compressive action between the two long links of the mechanism. A mechanical stop limits the motion. This way controlled intermittent dynamic compression between 2.5% and 12.5% is realized in the cartilage layer of the JLS. All functions are integrated into a single piece compliant mechanism which is produced out of titanium using 3D rapid prototyping by selective laser melting technology. The mechanism can be fitted with cages that hold the scaffolds for bone and cartilage in place and protect them from external loads while being implanted. A safety spring was added to accommodate for large actuation excursions. A number of prototypes were produced and tested for fatigue, plastic deformation, failure load, and displacements of the long links at the JLS locations under different axial loads. These tests confirmed the proper mechanical functioning of the Endoreactor. Work with animal models making use of the device to culture an amphiarthosis-like joint is foreseen in the near future. This work was carried out at part of MYJOINT: Living Bioreactor—Growing a New Joint in a Human Back, EU FP6-2004-NEST-C-1, Proposal No. 028861.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleDesign of an Endoreactor for the Cultivation of a Joint-Like-Structure
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume3
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Medical Devices
    identifier doi10.1115/1.3147270
    journal fristpage27527
    identifier eissn1932-619X
    treeJournal of Medical Devices:;2009:;volume( 003 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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