Polymers (Dec 2021)

Custom-Made Poly(urethane) Coatings Improve the Mechanical Properties of Bioactive Glass Scaffolds Designed for Bone Tissue Engineering

  • Monica Boffito,
  • Lucia Servello,
  • Marcela Arango-Ospina,
  • Serena Miglietta,
  • Martina Tortorici,
  • Susanna Sartori,
  • Gianluca Ciardelli,
  • Aldo R. Boccaccini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14010151
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 151

Abstract

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The replication method is a widely used technique to produce bioactive glass (BG) scaffolds mimicking trabecular bone. However, these scaffolds usually exhibit poor mechanical reliability and fast degradation, which can be improved by coating them with a polymer. In this work, we proposed the use of custom-made poly(urethane)s (PURs) as coating materials for 45S5 Bioglass®-based scaffolds. In detail, BG scaffolds were dip-coated with two PURs differing in their soft segment (poly(ε-caprolactone) or poly(ε-caprolactone)/poly(ethylene glycol) 70/30 w/w) (PCL-PUR and PCL/PEG-PUR) or PCL (control). PUR-coated scaffolds exhibited biocompatibility, high porosity (ca. 91%), and improved mechanical properties compared to BG scaffolds (2–3 fold higher compressive strength). Interestingly, in the case of PCL-PUR, compressive strength significantly increased by coating BG scaffolds with an amount of polymer approx. 40% lower compared to PCL/PEG-PUR- and PCL-coated scaffolds. On the other hand, PEG presence within PCL/PEG-PUR resulted in a fast decrease in mechanical reliability in an aqueous environment. PURs represent promising coating materials for BG scaffolds, with the additional pros of being ad-hoc customized in their physico-chemical properties. Moreover, PUR-based coatings exhibited high adherence to the BG surface, probably because of the formation of hydrogen bonds between PUR N-H groups and BG surface functionalities, which were not formed when PCL was used.

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