Publication | Closed Access
Electroactive Biomaterials Regulate the Electrophysiological Microenvironment to Promote Bone and Cartilage Tissue Regeneration
58
Citations
388
References
2024
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBone RepairBiomedical EngineeringOrthopaedic SurgeryBioactive MaterialRegenerative MedicineLarge BoneSynthetic Bone SubstituteRegenerative BiomaterialsBiomedical DevicesElectrophysiological MicroenvironmentBio-electronic InterfacesElectroactive MaterialElectrical StimulationRegenerative EngineeringMusculoskeletal Regenerative EngineeringFunctional Tissue EngineeringTissue RegenerationCartilage Tissue RegenerationBioelectronicsCartilage HomeostasisElectroactive BiomaterialsHard Tissue EngineeringElectrophysiologyMedicineBiomaterialsExtracellular Matrix
Abstract The incidence of large bone and articular cartilage defects caused by traumatic injury is increasing worldwide; the tissue regeneration process for these injuries is lengthy due to limited self‐healing ability. Endogenous bioelectrical phenomenon has been well recognized to play an important role in bone and cartilage homeostasis and regeneration. Studies have reported that electrical stimulation (ES) can effectively regulate various biological processes and holds promise as an external intervention to enhance the synthesis of the extracellular matrix, thereby accelerating the process of bone and cartilage regeneration. Hence, electroactive biomaterials have been considered a biomimetic approach to ensure functional recovery by integrating various physiological signals, including electrical, biochemical, and mechanical signals. This review will discuss the role of endogenous bioelectricity in bone and cartilage tissue, as well as the effects of ES on cellular behaviors. Then, recent advances in electroactive materials and their applications in bone and cartilage tissue regeneration are systematically overviewed, with a focus on their advantages and disadvantages as tissue repair materials and performances in the modulation of cell fate. Finally, the significance of mimicking the electrophysiological microenvironment of target tissue is emphasized and future development challenges of electroactive biomaterials for bone and cartilage repair strategies are proposed.
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