People recovering from heart damage often face a long and tricky journey. Healing is challenging because of the constant movement tissues must withstand as the heart beats. The same is true for vocal cords. Until now there was no injectable material strong enough for the job,” says Guangyu Bao, a PhD candidate in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at McGill University.
The team, led by Professor Luc Mongeau and Assistant
Professor Jianyu Li, developed a new injectable hydrogel for wound repair. The
hydrogel is a type of biomaterial that provides room for cells to live and
grow. Once injected into the body, the biomaterial forms a stable, porous
structure allowing live cells to grow or pass through to repair the injured
organs.
“The results are promising, and we hope that one day
the new hydrogel will be used as an implant to restore the voice of people with
damaged vocal cords, for example laryngeal cancer survivors,” says Guangyu Bao.
Putting it to the
test
The scientists tested the durability of their hydrogel
in a machine they developed to simulate the extreme biomechanics of human vocal
cords. Vibrating at 120 times a second for over 6 million cycles, the new
biomaterial remained intact while other standard hydrogels fractured into
pieces, unable to deal with the stress of the load.
Illustration shows the use of injectable hydrogel as
an implant to fill a wound and to restore the voice. Credit: Sepideh Mohammadi
“We were incredibly excited to see it
worked perfectly in our test. Before our work, no injectable hydrogels
possessed both high porosity and toughness at the same time. To solve this
issue, we introduced a pore-forming polymer to our formula,” says Guangyu Bao.
The innovation also opens new avenues for other
applications like drug delivery, tissue engineering, and the creation of model
tissues for drug screening, the scientists say. The team is even looking to use
the hydrogel technology to create lungs to test COVID-19 drugs.
“Our work highlights the synergy of materials science,
mechanical engineering and bioengineering in creating novel biomaterials with
unprecedented performance. We are looking forward to translating them into the
clinic,” said Professor Jianyu Li, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Biomaterials
and Musculoskeletal Health.
Journal article: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202102627
Source: Synthetic
tissue can repair hearts, muscles, and vocal cords – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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