Title :
Optical coherence microscopy for the evaluation of a tissue-engineered artificial cornea
Author :
Orwin, E.J. ; Lee, S. ; Raub, C. ; Icenogle, T. ; Arman, M. ; Cho, A. ; Lovec, R. ; Malone, A. ; Haskell, R.C. ; Hoeling, B.M. ; Petersen, D.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng., Harvey Mudd Coll., Claremont, CA, USA
Abstract :
A transparent artificial cornea derived from biological material is the ultimate goal of corneal research. Attempts at artificial corneal constructs produced from synthetic polymers have proved unsuccessful due to lack of biocompatibility and ability to integrate into the tissue. We have designed a corneal model derived from collagenous biological materials that has several advantages: it has low antigenicity and therefore small chance of eliciting an immune reaction, it can be broken down by the body´s own cells and gradually replaced over time by natural materials, and it may contain signaling information for native cells, thereby inducing normal phenotype and behavior. In addition, a transparent corneal model has the potential to be used for testing of novel ophthalmic drugs or gene therapy approaches, eliminating the need for animal testing. We have used an optical coherence microscope (OCM) to evaluate both the structure of our tissue constructs over time in culture and the optical properties of the tissue itself. This imaging technique promises to be an important diagnostic tool in our efforts to understand the influence of mechanical forces, cell phenotype, and soluble factors on the transparency of corneal tissue.
Keywords :
artificial organs; biomedical materials; biomedical optical imaging; cellular biophysics; drugs; eye; genetics; molecular biophysics; optical microscopy; optical tomography; proteins; tissue engineering; antigens; artificial cornea; biocompatibility; collagenous biological materials; gene therapy; ophthalmic drugs; optical coherence microscopy; signaling information; synthetic polymers; tissue-engineering; Biological materials; Biological system modeling; Biomedical optical imaging; Cells (biology); Cornea; Immune system; Optical microscopy; Optical polymers; Signal design; Testing; Cornea; optical coherence microscopy; optical coherence tomography; tissue engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2004. IEMBS '04. 26th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8439-3
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2004.1403388