Researchers from AMBER and Trinity, led by Dr. David Hoey, have successfully replicated the behavior of a blood vessel and its guiding structure to regenerate damaged tissue. The researchers, who published their work in the journal Advanced Functional Materials , used a Melt electrowriting (MEW) technique to provide an innovative off-the-shelf alternative to address the unmet clinical need for small-diameter vascular grafts to help combat cardiovascular disease .

Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of morbidity. Current treatments include vessel substitution using autologous/synthetic vascular grafts, but these commonly fail in small diameter applications, largely due to compliance mismatch and clot formation. In this research, a multicomponent vascular graft, that takes inspiration from native vessel architecture, was developed to overcome these limitations.

Melt electrowriting (MEW) is used to produce tubular scaffolds with vascular-mimetic fiber architecture and mechanics, which is combined with a lyophilized fibrinogen matrix with tailored degradation kinetics to generate a hybrid graft. Lead Investigator and study author Associate Professor David Hoey said, "We developed a novel multicomponent vascular graft that was inspired by the layered architecture of native blood vessels. "Utilizing advanced biofabrication technologies such as melt electrowriting (MEW) we could produce tubular scaffolds, that when combined with a fibrinogen matrix, could not only replicate th.