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Universitas Hasanuddin
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Bioactivity and bone cell formation with poly-ε-caprolactone/bioceramic 3D porous scaffolds

Juan P.K.

Polymers

Q1
Published: 2021Citations: 32

Abstract

This study applied poly-ε-caprolactone (PCL), a biomedical ceramic powder as an additive (nano-hydroxyapatite (nHA) or β-tricalcium diphosphate (β-TCP)), and sodium chloride (NaCl) and ammonium bicarbonate ((NH<sub>4</sub>)HCO<sub>3</sub>) as porogens; these stuffs were used as scaffold materials. An improved solvent-casting/particulate-leaching method was utilized to fabricate 3D porous scaffolds. In this study we examined the physical properties (elastic modulus, porosity, and contact angle) and degradation properties (weight loss and pH value) of the 3D porous scaffolds. Both nHA and β-TCP improved the mechanical properties (elastic modulus) of the 3D porous scaffolds. The elastic modulus (0.15~1.865 GPa) of the various composite scaffolds matched that of human cancellous bone (0.1~4.5 GPa). Osteoblast-like (MG63) cells were cultured, a microculture tetrazolium test (MTT) was conducted and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity of the 3D porous scaffolds was determined. Experimental results indicated that both nHA and β-TCP powder improved the hydrophilic properties of the scaffolds. The degradation rate of the scaffolds was accelerated by adding nHA or β-TCP. The MTT and ALP activity tests indicated that the scaffolds with a high ratio of nHA or β-TCP had excellent properties of in vitro biocompatibility (cell attachment and proliferation).

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10.3390/polym13162718

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BioceramicSciences
CaprolactoneSciences
Materials scienceSciences
PorositySciences
Chemical engineeringSciences
ScaffoldSciences
Biomedical engineeringSciences
Composite materialSciences
MedicineSciences
CopolymerSciences
PolymerSciences
EngineeringSciences