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The Effect of Different Diameters of Fat Converters on Adipose Tissue and Its Cellular Components: Selection for Preparation of Nanofat

He Qiu, Yichen Jiang, Chang Chen, Kelun Wu, Hang Wang

2021Aesthetic Surgery Journal17 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nanofat is an autologous product prepared mechanically from harvested fat. In nanofat grafting, converters are employed for mechanical emulsification to facilitate fat injection. To date, the study of different converters has received scant attention regarding whether they affect the characteristics of nanofat in terms of the practical applications and indications. OBJECTIVES: The authors set out to investigate the influence of different internal diameters of converters on biological functionality of nanofat during shuffling. METHODS: The 3-dimensional finite element method was employed to simulate the process of mechanical emulsification of fat and to research the stress with 5 different converters (3.76 mm, 2.00 mm, 1.20 mm, 1.00 mm, 0.80 mm). An assessment of the morphology of emulsified fat was conducted. Isolated stromal vascular fraction (SVF) was analyzed for cellular components, number, and viability through flowcytometry and live/ dead staining. Adipocytic and angiogenic differentiation assay allowed assessment of differentiation capacity of the SVF. RESULTS: The smaller the aperture of the converter, the greater the mechanical force on adipose tissue during mechanical emulsification, showing the different macroscopic and microscopic structure of the emulsified fat. No difference in viability or ratio of endothelial progenitor cells and other cells was found. Angiogenic and adipogenic differentiation capacity of the SVF significantly changed in 5 different converters. CONCLUSIONS: The mechanical emulsification from different apertures of converters exerts different effects of adipose tissue structure, cell content, and multipotency differentiation but not its viability. Converters with different apertures can be selected according to clinical needs.

Topics & Concepts

Adipose tissueStromal vascular fractionBiomedical engineeringViability assayMedicineCell biologyCellChemistryBiochemistryInternal medicineBiologyMesenchymal stem cell researchElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical ApplicationsBody Contouring and Surgery