SCIENTIST HAVE DEVELOPED SILK MAT TO HELP ARTHRITIS
Scientists develop silk mats that could treat arthritis
Scientists have synthesised mats made of silk-proteins
and bio-active glass fibres that they believe can assist the growth of bone
cells and repair worn-out joints in arthritis patients.
The disease most commonly affects joints in the knees, hips, hands, feet,
and spine and is marked by the breakdown of joint cartilage and underlying
bones.
Left untreated, it can cause severe pain, swelling, and eventually limited
range of movement.
"Current clinical treatment methods are limited by lack of viable
tissue substitutes to aid the repair process,"a scientist said.
To develop a suitable tissue substitute, scientists, looked into the natural bone-cartilage
interface and tried to mimic it synthetically in lab conditions.
Knee osteoarthritis is the most common bone and joint disease.
However, he pointed out that the available clinical grafts were expensive.
"We used silk, a natural protein to fabricate electrospun mats to
mimic the cartilage portion and bioactive glass to develop a composite
material, similar to the natural tissue," said the scientist.
For the mat, scientists used a kind of silk easily available in North-east
India.
"Muga (Assam) silk is endowed with properties that enhance the healing
process," he said.
The researchers adopted a green fabrication approach for the developing the
silk composite mats - electro-spinning.
"It is similar to knitting, except that it utilises electric high
voltage force to draw ultrafine fibres," he said.
A layer by layer approach was followed, where the bone layer was first
formed, on top of which the cartilage layer was developed. The resulting
composite mat resembled the architecture of the bone-cartilage interface.
To assist the regenerative process, the mats would be grafted in the
defected joint with cells harvested from the patient.
"The mats bond with the native tissue and acts as an artificial tissue
construct. Eventually the mats degrade with time and new tissue is formed in
its place," he said.
The mats were tested under laboratory conditions, where artificial tissue
formed efficiently during the two weeks of the study, researchers said.
However, the mats need to be tested in suitable animal models like rabbits
and pigs, and finally in human trials, before they become available to
patients.
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Labels: Arthritis, bone cartilage, Joint Pain, silk fibres, swelling, tissue substitute
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