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SURFACE COATING OF IMPLANTABLE MEDICAL DEVICES ADDING THERAPEUTIC FUNCTIONALITY : 치료 기능 부가를 위한 이식형 의료기기의 표면 코팅 연구

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dc.contributor.advisor최영빈-
dc.contributor.author박민-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-13T08:50:22Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-13T08:50:22Z-
dc.date.issued2015-02-
dc.identifier.other000000025399-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/119884-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 협동과정 바이오엔지니어링전공, 2015. 2. 최영빈.-
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation is described with material, design, fabrication and analysis/evaluation for surface coating of implantable medical devices, i.e., bone fixation systems and silicone implants, in order to add the therapeutic functionality. Even though the implantable medical devices have been widely developed and used in the clinical field, these still have drawbacks associated with lack of therapeutic functionality. To solve these, we suggest a promising multifunctional medical device adding therapeutic functionality, maintaining intact functionality of the implantable medical device.
Firstly, in order to control the corrosion rate of magnesium (Mg), we coated the surface of magnesium (Mg) with a biodegradable polymer, polycaprolactone (PCL) and varied coating thickness in a reproducible manner using an automated apparatus designed to follow the widely-accepted dip-coating method. Herein, PCL served as a good permeation barrier owing to its hydrophobicity and slower degradation in biological fluid than Mg. As we increased the coating thickness from 0 to 13.31 ± 0.36 µm, the volume of hydrogen gas and amount of Mg ions, the indicators of Mg corrosion, decreased by almost half from 0.57 ml/cm2/day and 0.55 mg/day to 0.20 ml/cm2/day and 0.26 mg/day, respectively. Therefore, we demonstrated that the thicker coating could better hinder the water permeation to the Mg surface and thus, a corrosion rate could be reduced in this work.
Secondly, we prepared a bone plate enabled with local, sustained release of alendronate, which is a drug known to inhibit osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and also expedite bone-remodeling activity of osteoblasts. For this, we coated a bone plate already in clinical use (PLT-1031, Inion, Finland) with a blend of alendronate and a biocompatible polymer, azidobenzoic acid-modified chitosan (i.e., Az-CH) photo-crosslinked by UV irradiation. As we performed the in vitro drug release study, the drug was released from the coating at a rate of 4.03 μg/day for 63 days in a sustained manner. To examine the effect on bone regeneration, the plate was fixed on an 8 mm cranial critical size defect in living rats and a newly formed bone volume was quantitatively evaluated by micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) at schedule times for 8 weeks. At 8 week, the group implanted with the plate enabled with sustained delivery of alendronate showed a significantly higher volume of newly formed bone (52.78 ± 6.84 %) than the groups implanted with the plates without drug (23.6 ± 3.81 %) (p < 0.05). The plate enabled with alendronate delivery also exhibited good biocompatibility on H&E staining, which was comparable to the Inion plate already in clinical use. Therefore, we suggest that a bone plate enabled with local, sustained delivery of alendronate can be a promising system of a combined functionality of bone fixation and its expedited repair.
Lastly, we proposed the acute, local suppression of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-ß), a major profibrotic cytokine, to reduce fibrosis around silicone implants. To this end, we prepared silicone implants that were able to release tranilast, a TGF-ß inhibitor, in a sustained manner for 5 days or 15 days. We performed histologic and immunohistochemical analyses for 12 weeks after the implantation of the implants in living rats. The capsule thicknesses and collagen densities significantly decreased compared with those around the non-treated silicone implants. Notably, early suppression of TGF-ß affected the fibrogenesis that actually occurs at the late stage of wound healing. This change may be ascribed to the decrease in monocyte recruitment mediated by early TGF-ß during the acute inflammatory reaction. Thus, a significant decrease in differentiated macrophages was observed along with a decrease in the quantity of TGF-ß and fibroblasts during the subsequent inflammation stage
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dc.description.abstractthese changes led to a diminished fibrotic capsule formation.-
dc.description.tableofcontentsAbstract ⅰ
Contents v
List of Tables ix
List of Figures xi

Chapter 1. Introduction 1
1.1 Implantable Medical Devices 1
1.2 Bone Fixation system 7
1.2.1 Drawbacks of Bone Fixation system 12
1.3 Silicone Implant 16
1.3.1 Drawbacks of Silicone Implant 23
1.4 Research Purpose 28

Chapter 2. Surface Coating of Implantable Medical Devices 30
2.1 Surface Coating Technology 30
2.1.1 Dip Coating 31
2.1.2 Spray Coating 34
2.1.3 Drop Casting 37
2.2 Biopolymers as a Coating Material 39
2.2.1 Synthetic polymer: Polycaprolatone(PCL) and Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)(PLGA) 44
2.2.2 Natural polymer: Chitosan 53

Chapter 3. Polycaprolactone Coating with Varying Thicknesses for Controlled Corrosion of Magnesium 60
3.1 Introduction 60
3.2 Materials and Methods 64
3.2.1 Materials 64
3.2.2 Sample Preparation and Coating Process 65
3.2.3 Immersion test 66
3.2.4 Characterization of PCL coating 67
3.3 Results 68
3.3.1 Coating analysis 68
3.3.2 Coating Rate Analysis 69
3.3.3 Surface Characterization during Corrosionl 71
3.4 Discussion 73
3.5 Conclusion 76

Chapter 4. Acute Suppression of TGF- ß with Local, Sustained Release of Tranilast against the Foramtion of Fibrous Capsules around Silicone Implants 90
4.1 Introduction 90
4.2 Materials and Methods 94
4.2.1 Materials 94
4.2.2 Sample Prepartion 95
4.2.3 Characterization 96
4.2.4 In vivo Animal Study 98
4.2.5 Histopatholoic Evaluation by Various Stainging Methods 99
4.2.6 Statistical Analysis 100
4.3 Results 101
4.3.1 Implant Characterization 101
4.3.2 Capsule Thickness 103
4.3.3 Collagen Density 105
4.3.4 Fibroblasts 106
4.3.5 TGF-ß 107
4.3.6 Monocytes/macrophages 109
4.4 Discussion 110
4.5 Conclusion 113

Chapter 5. Bioabsorabable Bone Plates Enabled with Local, Sustained Delivery of Alendronate for Bone Regeneration 149
5.1 Introduction 149
5.2 Materials and Methods 153
5.2.1 Materials 153
5.2.2 Synthesis of an Aziobenzoic Acid-Modified Chitosan (Az-CH) 154
5.2.3 Preparation of Bone Plate Samples 154
5.2.4 Characterizations of Az-CH 156
5.2.5 Characterizations of Az-CH 157
5.2.6 Measurement of Drug-Loading Amount 157
5.2.7 Measurement of Drug-Loading Amount 158
5.2.8 In vivo Drug Release Study 159
5.2.9 In vivo Cell Cytotoxicity Evaluation 159
5.2.10 In vivo Animal Study 160
5.2.11 Histopathologic Evaluation 162
5.2.12 Statistics 163
5.3 Results 163
5.3.1 Characterization of Az-CH 163
5.3.2 Characterization of Plate Samples 164
5.3.3 In vitro Drug Release Profile 166
5.3.4 Cytotoxicity 166
5.3.5 In vivo new bone formation 167
5.3.6 Histological Evaluation 168
5.4 Discussion 168
5.5 Conclusion 171

Chapter 6. General Conclusion 186

References 189

Abstract in Korean 199

Acknowledgement 202

Appendix 204
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent8128222 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subject표면 코팅-
dc.subject약물전달-
dc.subject의료기기-
dc.subject.ddc660-
dc.titleSURFACE COATING OF IMPLANTABLE MEDICAL DEVICES ADDING THERAPEUTIC FUNCTIONALITY-
dc.title.alternative치료 기능 부가를 위한 이식형 의료기기의 표면 코팅 연구-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorMIN PARK-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pagesxxv, 214-
dc.contributor.affiliation공과대학 협동과정 바이오엔지니어링전공-
dc.date.awarded2015-02-
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