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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Synthesis, characterisation and invitro evaluation of PLLA-co-succinic anhydride networks

George, Karina Anne January 2006 (has links)
The biocompatibility and the in vivo degradation of poly(L-lactide), (PLLA)- based materials has prompted much interest in the development of these materials into scaffolds for tissue engineering applications. PLLA-based polymers have been available for use in craniomaxillofacial surgery since 1991. Usually, a plate or sheet of the polymer is placed in or over a defect in the bone. Ideally the bone will use the polymer as a support to repair the defect and as the polymer degrades, the bone will continually remodel, so that the loss of mass and mechanical strength of the polymer correlates with the increase in the mass and strength of the new bone. However, this is an ideal situation, and is not always observed in practice. The aim of this work is to develop PLLA-based materials that should encourage bone growth onto the material and allow control over the rate of degradation. PLLA-co-succinic anhydride networks were synthesised and the mineralisation and degradation of these materials were evaluated in vitro. The synthesis of these networks, involved the polymerisation of 4-arm star PLLA polymers, which were coupled through their end groups with succinic anhydride. The low molecular weight star PLLA polymers were synthesised using calcium hydride and pentaerythritol as initiator and co-initiator respectively. Calcium hydride was preferred to stannous octoate in this study as there is concern over the release of tin-containing when the polymer is implanted. As only very limited studies have been directed into the polymerisation and resulting polymers formed using calcium hydride, this was a major focus of the study. The identification of hydrogen in the reaction tubes was evidence that calcium alkoxide, formed from the reaction of pentaerythritol and calcium hydride, is the actual initiating species for the ring opening polymerisation. In situ FT-Raman spectroscopy was used as a tool to monitor the reaction process and was found to be a convenient and reliable method for obtaining information about the polymerisation kinetics. Analysis of the FTRaman kinetic curves, along with analysis of products by GPC, polarimetry and NMR spectroscopy showed that the polymerisation was 'quasi-living' depending on the ratio of pentaerythritol and calcium hydride in the system. Furthermore, both the degree of transesterification and racemisation of polymers synthesised in optimised reactions were low. The PLLA-co-succinic anhydride networks were synthesised by coupling of hydroxyl-terminated PLLA star polymers with succinic anhydride (one-pot reaction) and by coupling hydroxyl-terminated PLLA stars with succinic anhydride-terminated PLLA star polymers (two-pot reaction), using a carbodiimide, EDC to mediate the esterification. The one-pot reaction produced polymers with high gel fractions and high conversion of functional groups in the gel, whereas the gel fraction and conversion of functional groups was lower in the two-pot reaction. For the networks synthesised in the one-pot reaction, the molecular weight between crosslinks was controlled by the length of the PLLA polymer arms. The networks synthesised were characterised by FTIR-ATR spectroscopy, SEM, contact angle and by swelling. The extent of mineralisation of the PLLA-co-succinic anhydride networks in simulated body fluid (SBF) after 14 days was greater than the mineral deposition on the high molecular weight PLLA reference polymer. The degradation of the networks was carried out under accelerated conditions in 0.1 M NaOH at 37 degrees Celsius. All networks degraded much more slowly than the high molecular weight linear PLLA reference sample. The rate of degradation was found to be dependent on the crystallinity of the polymer chains, with the more crystalline networks degrading at a faster rate, while the location of the degradation, surface or bulk, was controlled by the crosslink density, showing that the degradation is 'tuneable'.

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