Comparison of in Vascular Bioreactors and In Vivo Models of Degradation and Cellular Response of Mg-Zn-Mn Stents.

2021 
Traditional in vitro evaluation criteria of magnesium (Mg)-based stents cannot reflect the degradation process in vivo, due to the interdependence and interference between biodegradable properties and bioenvironment. The current direct and indirect evaluation approaches of in vitro biocompatibility do not have a hydrodynamic environment and vascular biological structure existing in vivo. Herein, we designed a vascular bioreactor to provide an ex vivo culture environment for vessels, which reveals the degradation behavior of Mg-Zn-Mn stent and the effect of its degradation on cells. We reported that rabbit carotid arteries could maintain native morphology and viability in the bioreactor under the best condition within a flow rate of 5.4 mL min-1 and a culture time of one week. With this culture condition, Mg-Zn-Mn stents were implanted into the arteries in the bioreactors and compared with in vivo rabbit models. The arteries maintained cell survival in the bioreactor, but the cell attachment was absent on the stent struts, associated with a fast degradation. Conversely, the stents achieved a rapid and complete endothelialization in vivo for two weeks. This study could provide a correlation and difference of the degradation behavior and cellular response to the degradation of Mg-based stent between ex vivo and in vivo approaches.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    31
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []