Browsing by Author "Soumya, Columbus"
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Item Modulating poly(epsilon-caprolactone) scaffold properties by altering porogen concentration for blood-vessel tissue engineering.(Journal of Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering, 2014-06) Soumya, Columbus; Krishnan, LK; Krishnan, VKAchievement of optimum scaffold porosity while bearing relevant mechanical integrity and suitable degradation profile needs to be addressed appropriately for the successful construction of a tissue engineered blood vessel. Poly[ethylene glycol] (PEG) was used as porogen while fabricating poly[�-caprolactone] (PCL) tubular scaffolds by solvent casting and particulate leaching process. Scaffolds were fabricated by varying polymer/porogen ratio from 4:1, 2:1:4:3 to 1:1 for comparative study. The effect of porogen concentration on scaffold physico-chemical properties including real time degradation in PBS at 37 �C was studied using two reference molecular weight PEGs (3400 and 8000). Wall thickness and tubular consistency of cast scaffolds were found to improve with increasing PEG content. Analysis using micro-computed tomography (�-CT) revealed majority of pores to lie between 12–24 �m in size. The concentration of PEG was found to influence porosity, hydrophilicity, crystallinity and mechanical strength within scaffold systems containing each MW PEGs. Though considerable reduction in tensile strength was observed for scaffolds with 1:1 PCL:PEG ratio, mechanical integrity of these scaffolds were retained even after one year degradation. Scaffolds with 1:1 PEG-PCL ratio were found to have better structural integrity, highest porosity, favourable mechanical strength for blood vessel construction, long term degradation characteristics suitable for implant applications and good endothelial cell coverage after 3 days static cell culture.Item Role of PEGylated CdSe-ZnS quantum dots on structural and functional properties of electrospun polycaprolactone scaffolds for blood vessel tissue engineering(European Polymer Journal., 2021-05) Soumya, Columbus; Diksha, Painuly; Renjith P, Nair; Kalliyana Krishnan, VConjugation of quantum dots (Q-dots) into tissue engineering scaffolds is extremely beneficial for designing composite scaffolds imparting multifunctional properties. In the present work, we report the efficacy of incorporating the PEGylated CdSe-ZnS (Q-dots) into electrospun poly(caprolactone)(PCL) scaffolds whose properties were evaluated for small diameter blood vessel applications. Incorporation of Q-dots was found to result in significant reduction in fiber diameter of electrospun scaffolds. Corresponding pore size ranges varied from 12 to 36 µm for composite scaffold compared with 12–60 µm in bare scaffold. Both PCL and composite scaffolds were found to possess better mechanical strength and elasticity than that of native arteries. Contact angle measurements revealed hydrophobic nature of scaffolds which significantly improved upon modification with fibrin. PCL/Q-dot composite scaffolds were found to possess optimum micro-structure for supporting uniform endothelial cell growth after 5 days of culture compared to the pristine PCL scaffold.