New cardiac patch may repair heart and hasten heart attack recovery

Published On 2019-04-01 13:40 GMT   |   Update On 2019-04-01 13:40 GMT

New cardiac patch may repair heart and hasten heart attack recovery.


A team of biomedical engineers led by Feng Zhao from Michigan Technological University has published two papers on engineering prevascularized tissues. The paper, published in the journal Theranostics, focuses on developing a stem cell cardiac patch made with tissue engineered with tiny blood vessels to be like real heart muscled. Their review paper published in Acta Biomaterialia, examines the pros and cons of six innovative strategies for aligning the microvessels in engineered tissues.


Patching up a heart needs the help of tiny blood vessels. Aligning dense vascular structures in engineered cardiac patches can help patients recover from a heart attack.


The vascular system brings nutrients and oxygen to tissues; important ingredients for successful healing following an organ transplant, heart surgery or skin graft. Microvascular structures, which are capillary-like microvessels, are particularly important and, in order to be effective, must be highly aligned, dense and mature. Engineering biomaterials with such a robust vascular system are difficult and depend on the framework — the scaffold —to grow the cells.


“The significance of microvessel organization in 3D scaffolds has largely been ignored,” Zhao said in a press release. “Microvessels are not the same as cells; people have done a lot of work looking at the alignment of cells but this work on microvessels is still new. Understanding the mechanisms behind microvessel alignment in biomaterials will help us and other biomedical engineers to create better, more refined implants and devices.”


To get there, Zhao and her team reviewed the advantages and disadvantages of six different methods used to align vessels: electromechanical stimulation, surface topography, micro-scaffolding and microfluidics, surface patterning and 3D printing.


The advantages vary quite a bit and focus on the ease or controllability of a method. Electromechanical stimulation is simply stretching; micro-scaffolding and microfluidics make medical testing easier; 3D printing is customizable. However, the disadvantages center on one major challenge: Engineered microvessels tend to be too big —they’re much larger than the real capillaries in heart tissues — and often they’re not dense and mature enough to properly supply nutrients and blood.


Aligning microvessels is a bit like plumbing and mismatched sizes don’t bode well for turning the water on. For some hands-on problem solving, Zhao’s team focused in on biomimicking the microvessel alignment, density, and dimension of the heart muscle.


To date, the engineering process to create the ideal biomaterial for a prevascularized cardiac patch has not made it to clinical trials. Zhao and her team hope to change that.


“Myocardial infarction is a big problem and currently there is no good treatment for it,” she said. A cardiac patch could help following a heart attack. “The cardiac patch is completely biological, comprised of stem cells with vasculature that mimics real tissue, that could help repair a heart.”


The Theranostics paper delves into the role of microvessels in that process and how an engineered tissue can follow the lead of natural ones.


“In the heart muscle, the cells are highly aligned for electromechanical signal transaction and the microvessels are also highly aligned and dense,” Zhao said, explaining that microvessels in the patch can connect to native vasculature, bringing nutrients and oxygen. Without this, the engineered cardiac patch might die. “But all tissues have this microstructure. It’s everywhere. This technology could be used for skeletal muscles, burn and chronic wound healing and nerve regeneration.”


Zhao and her team have shown the potential of biomimicry to grow microvessels in tissues suitable for a cardiac patch. The next steps will be animal trials and refining medical technology for implants and devices. With the help of tiny, dense, neatly aligned blood vessels, engineered tissues could help hearts, skin, bones, and muscles regenerate naturally.

Article Source : With inputs from Theranostics�and �Acta Biomaterialia

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