The effect of biomimetic mineralization of 3D-printed mesoporous bioglass scaffolds on physical properties and in vitro osteogenicity
M. Natividad Gomez-Cerezo, Daniel Lozano, Daniel Arcos, Maria, Vallet-Regi, Cedryck Vaquette

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that phosphate-buffered saline immersion of 3D-printed mesoporous bioglass scaffolds enhances their surface properties and osteogenic potential, potentially improving bone regeneration outcomes.
Contribution
It introduces a simple PBS immersion method to remove binders and induce biomimetic mineralization, improving scaffold surface and biological performance.
Findings
Surface area increased 3-fold after PBS treatment
Roughness and hardness increased 5- and 4-fold respectively
Enhanced osteogenic gene expression observed in vitro
Abstract
Three-dimensional Mesoporous bioactive glasses (MBGs) scaffolds has been widely considered for bone regeneration purposes and additive manufacturing enables the fabrication of highly bioactive patient-specific constructs for bone defects. Commonly, this process is performed with the addition of polymeric binders that facilitate the printability of scaffolds. However, these additives cover the MBG particles resulting in the reduction of their osteogenic potential. The present work investigates a simple yet effective phosphate-buffered saline immersion method for achieving polyvinyl alcohol binder removal while enables the maintenance of the mesoporous structure of MBG 3D-printed scaffolds. This resulted in significantly modifying the surface of the scaffold via the spontaneous formation of a biomimetic mineralized layer which positively affected the physical and biological properties of…
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