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A DRUG DELIVERY APPROACH TO OVERCOMING FIBROUS TISSUE GROWTH ON POROUS POLY(LACTIC-CO-GLYCOLIC ACID) DISCS AND STUDY OF SCAVENGER RECEPTOR MEDIATED RESPONSES TO BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS

<p><strong>A compatible interface between a biomedical material and host tissue is paramount to the continual function and life-span of medical devices that reside in the body. However, the unfavourable host response that ensues when foreign materials inhabit the body must be overcome for sophisticated medical devices, such as artificial organs and real-time biosensors, to be used clinically. My thesis research commenced with a search to find a pharmaceutical compound that could be incorporated into a medical device to suppress the accumulation of fibrous tissue. A prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor, a drug developed to inhibit collagen synthesis, was found to be effective at inhibiting collagen deposition within and on the outer surface of a poly(lactic-glycolic acid) disc, and also limited connective tissue ingrowth. Furthermore, the drug suppressed Scavenger Receptor A (SRA) expression on a macrophage-like cell culture, a receptor known to contain a collagenous domain. The latter finding prompted a review of the literature, upon which it was discovered that SRA mediates leukocyte adhesion and binding to an assortment of materials, such as silica, modified polystyrene, titanium, and iron(III) oxide. As a result, a series of studies were initiated to investigate whether leukocytes use SRA to detect a range of different biomedical materials. Consequently, we found that SRA contributes very little to leukocyte binding of two common medical polymers, polystyrene and poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), but may interact with the materials to affect the cytokine profile in the local environment. In a subsequent study, SRA was found to be crucial to the leukocyte binding of polyanionic hydrogels. In summary, we have identified a unique pharmaceutical strategy for suppressing the accumulation of fibrous tissue on medical devices in vivo, and uncovered a mechanism of leukocyte stimulation in response to incubation with biomedical materials that the material science research community was not previously aware of. </strong></p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12828
Date04 1900
CreatorsLove, Ryan J.
ContributorsJones, Kim S., Margetts, Peter J, Brash, J.L., Biomedical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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