Multiscale porosity in mesoporous bioglass 3D-printed scaffolds for bone regeneration
M. Natividad Gomez-Cerezo, Juan Pena, Saso Ivanovski, Daniel Arcos,, Maria Vallet-Regi, Cedryck Vaquette

TL;DR
This study develops multiscale porous 3D-printed bioglass scaffolds with enhanced bone regeneration potential by combining macro-, micro-, and mesoporosity, and evaluates their physical and biological properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multiscale porosity design in 3D-printed bioglass scaffolds, combining different pore sizes for improved bone regeneration.
Findings
Microporosity increased early mineralisation and calcium phosphate layer formation.
Microporosity influenced mechanical strength, with higher porosity reducing compressive strength.
Enhanced cellular activity and RUNX2 production observed in microporous scaffolds.
Abstract
In order to increase the bone forming ability of MBG-PCL composite scaffold, microporosity was created in the struts of 3D-printed MBG-PCL scaffolds for the manufacturing of a construct with a multiscale porosity consisting of meso-, micro- and macro-pores. 3D-printing imparted macroporosity while the microporosity was created by porogen removal from the struts, and the MBG particles were responsible for the mesoporosity. The scaffolds were 3D-printed using a mixture of PCL, MBG and phosphate buffered saline (PBS) particles, subsequently leached out. Microporous-PCL (pPCL) as a negative control, microporous MBG-PCL (pMBG-PCL) and non-microporous-MBG-PCL (MBG-PCL) were investigated. Scanning electron microscopy, mercury intrusion porosimetry and micro-computed tomography demonstrated that the PBS removal resulted in the formation of micropores inside the struts with porosity of around…
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