4.6 Article

Characterization of an Anisotropic Hydrogel Tissue Substrate for Infusion Testing

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE
Volume 114, Issue 4, Pages 1992-2002

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/app.30639

Keywords

bioengineering; biopolymers; diffusion; drug delivery systems; hydrogels

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R21 NS052670]

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Artificial tissue models that capture specific transport properties are useful for investigating physical phenomena important to drug delivery. In this study, an in vitro tissue model was developed and characterized with the goal of mimicking aligned tissue. An anisotropic porous medium was developed by the construction of a 1% agarose hydrogel implanted with different volume fractions (similar to 5, 10, and 20%) of 10-mu m-diameter glass fibers. The developed substrate was able to capture anisotropic transport after the direct infusion of a macromolecular tracer, Evans blue albumin (EBA). To further characterize the test substrate, the diffusion tensor of water was measured by diffusion tensor imaging, and the ratios of the diffusivities in the directions parallel and perpendicular to the glass fibers were 1.16, 1.20, and 1.26 for 5, 10, and 20% fiber volume fractions, respectively. The hydraulic conductivity was estimated by the measurement of pressure gradients across samples under controlled microflow conditions in the direction parallel to implanted fibers. The hydraulic conductivities at various hydrogel concentrations without fibers and in a 1% hydrogel with various fiber volume fractions were measured; for example, K-parallel to = 1.20 x 10(-12) m(4) N-1 s(-1) (where K-parallel to is the conductivity component in the direction parallel to the glass fibers) for 20% fiber volume fractions. Also, EBA distributions were fit to porous medium transport models to estimate hydraulic conductivity in the direction perpendicular to glass fibers. The estimated ratio of directional hydraulic conductivity, K-parallel to/K-perpendicular to (where K-perpendicular to is the conductivity component in the direction perpendicular to the glass fibers), ranged from approximately 3 to 5, from 6 to 10, and from 40 to 90 for 5, 10, and 20% fiber volume fractions, respectively. These agarose hydrogel models provided convenient media for quantifying infusion protocols at low flow rates. (C) 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 114: 1992-2002,2009

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