Title :
Monitoring the Long-Term Degradation Behavior of Biomimetic Bioadhesive Using Wireless Magnetoelastic Sensor
Author :
Meng-Hsien Lin ; Anderson, Jonathan ; Pinnaratip, Rattapol ; Hao Meng ; Konst, Shari ; DeRouin, Andrew J. ; Rajachar, Rupak ; Keat Ghee Ong ; Lee, Bruce P.
Abstract :
The degradation behavior of a tissue adhesive is critical to its ability to repair a wound while minimizing prolonged inflammatory response. Traditional degradation tests can be expensive to perform, as they require large numbers of samples. The potential for using magnetoelastic resonant sensors to track bioadhesive degradation behavior was investigated. Specifically, biomimetic poly (ethylene glycol)- (PEG-) based adhesive was coated onto magnetoelastic (ME) sensor strips. Adhesive-coated samples were submerged in solutions buffered at multiple pH levels (5.7, 7.4 and 10.0) at body temperature (37 °C) and the degradation behavior of the adhesive was tracked wirelessly by monitoring the changes in the resonant amplitude of the sensors for over 80 days. Adhesive incubated at pH 7.4 degraded over 75 days, which matched previously published data for bulk degradation behavior of the adhesive while utilizing significantly less material (~103 times lower). Adhesive incubated at pH 10.0 degraded within 25 days while samples incubated at pH 5.7 did not completely degrade even after 80 days of incubation. As expected, the rate of degradation increased with increasing pH as the rate of ester bond hydrolysis is higher under basic conditions. As a result of requiring a significantly lower amount of samples compared to traditional methods, the ME sensing technology is highly attractive for fully characterizing the degradation behavior of tissue adhesives in a wide range of physiological conditions.
Keywords :
adhesives; biological tissues; biomedical equipment; biomedical materials; biomimetics; coatings; pH; ME sensing technology; adhesive-coated samples; biomimetic bioadhesive degradation behavior; biomimetic poly (ethylene glycol)-based adhesive; body temperature; bulk degradation behavior; ester bond hydrolysis; inflammatory response; magnetoelastic resonant sensors; pH levels; physiological conditions; tissue adhesive; traditional degradation testing; wireless magnetoelastic sensor; wound; Amorphous magnetic materials; Biomedical monitoring; Coatings; Degradation; Magnetic resonance; Monitoring; Biodegradation; Magnetoelastic sensor; biodegradation; magnetoelastic sensor; mussel adhesive protein; tissue adhesive;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2015.2405251