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3-D Printable Implants for Damaged Knees

by Dr. Meenakshy Varier on April 20, 2017 at 6:32 PM
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Highlights

A team of researchers from Duke University has created a cartilage-mimicking material which may allow surgeons to 3-D print replacement knee parts. These parts can be customized depending on each patient's anatomy.


Human knees have a pair of built-in shock absorbers called the menisci, which are ear-shaped chunks of cartilage, located between the thigh and shin bones. It acts as a cushion during each step taken.

‘The hydrogen-based cartilage has strength and elasticity, similar to that of the human cartilage and can be customized based on 3D images of a patient�s anatomy,obtained from CT or MRI scans.’

But it can be permanently damaged due to long-term wear and tear or sports-related injury, resulting in debilitating pain and increased risk of developing arthritis.

As one approaches adulthood, the meniscus has limited ability to heal on its own.

One option of repairing the damaged meniscus is through surgery by its partial or complete remove of the.

The currently available implants however have certain drawbacks like:

Double-Network Hydrogel-Based Material

In the recent years, hydrogels have been widely gaining attention as a replacement option for damaged cartilage. But so far synthetic hydrogels that are equal in strength to human cartilage or that are 3-D-printable, have not been created.

"The current gels that are available are really not as strong as human tissues, and generally, when they come out of a printer nozzle they don't stay put -- they will run all over the place, because they are mostly water," said Benjamin Wiley, an associate professor of chemistry at Duke and author of the paper.

The developed material is hydrogel-based and it is the first to match human cartilage in strength and elasticity. It is 3-D-printable and stable inside the body. They are biocompatible and have a molecular structure similar to the cartilage.

The research team used a $300 3-D printer to create custom menisci for a plastic model of a knee, to demonstrate how it might work.

"We've made it very easy now for anyone to print something that is pretty close in its mechanical properties to cartilage, in a relatively simple and inexpensive process," Wiley said.

A graduate student in making the hydrogel- based material, Feichen Yang, Wiley's lab and author on the paper, Feichen Yang, experimented with In the first step in making the hydrogel-based material, Feichen Yang, a graduate student at Wiley's lab, mixed together two different types of hydrogels, to create a double-network hydrogel. One hydrogel was stiffer and stronger and the other softer and stretchier.

"The two networks are woven into each other," Yang said. "And that makes the whole material extremely strong."

The strength and elasticity of the mixture was adjusted by changing the relative amounts of the two hydrogels. This helped to create a formula that best matches the human cartilage.

In the next step, a special ingredient, a nanoparticle clay, was mixed to make the mock-cartilage 3-D-printable.

The hydrogen flows like water when under stress, after the addition of the clay. When stress is removed, the hydrogel immediately hardens into its printed shape.

3-D printing custom implants are based on virtual 3-D models of a patient's anatomy, which can be obtained from computer tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.

"Shape is a huge deal for the meniscus," Wiley said. "This thing is under a lot of pressure, and if it doesn't fit you perfectly it could potentially slide out, or be debilitating or painful."

"A meniscus is not a homogenous material," Yang added. "The middle is stiffer, And the outside is a bit softer. Multi-material 3-D printers let you print different materials in different layers, but with a traditional mold you can only use one material."

"This is really a young field, just starting out," Wiley said. "I hope that demonstrating the ease with which this can be done will help get a lot of other people interested in making more realistic printable hydrogels with mechanical properties that are even closer to human tissue."

The report appears online in ACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering.

Reference

  1. Benjamin Wiley et al.3D Printing of a Double Network Hydrogel with a Compression Strength and Elastic Modulus Greater than those of Cartilage. ACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering; (2017) DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.7b00094


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