Surface modification and fibrovascular ingrowth of porous polyethylene anophthalmic implants

Authors
Yang, Hee SeokPark, KwideokSon, Jun SikKim, Jae-JinHan, Dong KeunPark, Byung WooBaek, Se Hyun
Issue Date
2007-04
Publisher
POLYMER SOC KOREA
Citation
MACROMOLECULAR RESEARCH, v.15, no.3, pp.256 - 262
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of surface modification on the fibrovascular ingrowth into porous polyethylene (PE) spheres (Medpor (R)), which are used as an anophthalmic socket implant material. To make the inert, hydrophobic PE surface hydrophilic, nonporous PE film and porous PE spheres were subjected to plasma treatment and insitu acrylic acid (AA) grafting followed by the immobilization of arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) peptide. The surface-modified PE was evaluated by performing surface analyses and tested for fibroblast adhesion and proliferation in vitro. In addition, the porous PE implants were inserted for up to 3 weeks in the abdominal area of rabbits and, after their retrieval, the level of fibrovascular ingrowth within the implants was assessed in vivo. As compared to the unmodified PE control, a significant increase in the hydrophilicity of both the AA-grafted (PE-g-PAA) and RGD-immobilized PE (PE-g-RGD) was observed by the measurement of the water contact angle. The cell adhesion at 72 h was most notable in the PE-g-RGD, followed by the PE-g-PAA and PE control. There was no significant difference between the two modified surfaces. When the cross-sectional area of tissue ingrowth in vivo was evaluated, the area of fibrovascularization was the largest with PE-g-RGD. The results of immunostaining of CD31, which is indicative of the degree of vascularization, showed that the RGD-immobilized surface could elicit more widespread fibrovascularization within the porous PE implants. This work demonstrates that the present surface modifications, viz. hydrophilic AA grafting and RGD peptide immobilization, can be very effective in inducing fibrovascular ingrowth into porous PE implants.
Keywords
ADHESION PEPTIDES; ORBITAL IMPLANT; CELL-ADHESION; MEDPOR; HYDROXYAPATITE; STRESS; ADHESION PEPTIDES; ORBITAL IMPLANT; CELL-ADHESION; MEDPOR; HYDROXYAPATITE; STRESS; anophthalmic implant; polyethylene; plasma treatment; acrylic acid; RGD; fibrovascular ingrowth
ISSN
1598-5032
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/134511
DOI
10.1007/BF03218784
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2007
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE