Tribological evaluation of a novel hybrid for repair of articular cartilage defects

2021 
Abstract The friction and wear properties of silica/poly(tetrahydrofuran)/poly(e-caprolactone) (SiO2/PTHF/PCL-diCOOH) hybrid materials that are proposed as cartilage tissue engineering materials were investigated against living articular cartilage. A testing rig was designed to allow testing against fresh bovine cartilage. The friction force and wear were compared for five compositions of the hybrid biomaterial articulating against freshly harvested bovine cartilage in diluted bovine calf serum. Under a non-migrating contact, the friction force increased and hence shear force applied to the opposing articular cartilage also increased, resulting in minor damage to the cartilage surface. This worse case testing scenario was used to discriminate between material formulations and revealed the increase in friction and damaged area was lowest for the hybrid containing the most silica. Further friction and wear tests on one hybrid formulation with an elastic modulus closest to that of cartilage were then conducted in a custom incubator system. This demonstrated that over a five day period the friction force, cell viability and glucosaminoglycan (GAG) release into the lubricant were similar between a cartilage-cartilage interface and the hybrid-cartilage interface, supporting the use of these materials for cartilage repair. These results demonstrate how tribology testing can play a part in the development of new materials for chondral tissue engineering. Statement of significance Designing materials that maintain the low friction and wear of articular cartilage whilst supporting the growth of new tissue is critical if further damage is to be avoided during repair of cartilage defects. This work examines the tribological performance of a SiO2/PTHF/PCL-diCOOH hybrid material and demonstrates a testing protocol that could be applied to any proposed material for cartilage regeneration. Tribological tests demonstrated that changing the hybrid composition decreased friction and reduced damage to the cartilage counterface. This study demonstrates how tribological testing can be integrated into the design process to produce materials with a higher chance of clinical success.
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