Bioengineered tissue mechanics: experimental characterization and a multi-component model

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Bioengineered tissue mechanics: experimental characterization and a multi-component model

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2013-08

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In the last few decades, tissue engineering has emerged as an interdisciplinary field of research which holds much promise as a complement to clinical medicine towards the overall improvement of personal health. Despite significant advances in this field, much work in TE continues to rely on an Edisonian approach of employing ad hoc methods to engineer tissues with desired properties without fundamental knowledge of the problem at hand. This thesis presents the development of a comprehensive model that predicts the mechanical properties of bioengineered tissue equivalents (TEs) based on its structure and composition, to enhance the understanding of the contribution of various biological components (e.g. biopolymeric fibers, cells, etc) to macroscopic mechanical properties of a tissue at different stages of tissue growth. The project framework considered bioengineered tissues as being composed of three components: fibrous networks, an interstitial matrix, and cells. The following interactions between different components were investigated: (a) multiple fiber networks, (b), fiber network + interstitial matrix, and (c) fiber network + cells. Experimentally, mechanical tests such as stress relaxation and tensile stretch to failure were coupled with electron microscopy, confocal microscopy, and biochemical analyses to probe tissue microstructure and composition. Constructs were formulated with varying compositions of the different components in a TE. These experimental results guided the development of the theoretical model. Modeling work built upon an existing single-component microstructural model by incorporating other components and morphological features as observed from experiment. Improvements to the model combined two approaches: (1) a microstructural approach via incorporation of morphological features observed from micrographs, and (2) a phenomenological approach using constitutive relations commonly employed for various biological structures. Model validation was done by comparing model predictions of mechanical behavior with experimental results; agreements and discrepancies alike shed insight into the complex interactions between different components the comprise a TE. Overall, the work presented in this thesis represented significant improvements to the predictive capabilities of our computational model, and established the foundation for further modifications to capture better the microstructure and mechanics of different components within a TE.

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University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2013. Major: Material Science and Engineering. Advisor: Professor: Victor H. Barocas, Prof. Robert T. Tranquillo. 1 computer file (PDF); vii, 150 pages, appendix A.

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Lai, Victor. (2013). Bioengineered tissue mechanics: experimental characterization and a multi-component model. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/158711.

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