Title of article
Ectopic bone formation in rats: the importance of vascularity of the acceptor site
Author/Authors
Ed H. M. Hartman، نويسنده , , Johan W. M. Vehof، نويسنده , , J. E. de Ruijter، نويسنده , , Paul H. M. Spauwen، نويسنده , , John A. Jansen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
7
From page
5831
To page
5837
Abstract
Bone graft substitutes (BGS) can be fabricated by the combination of three key ingredients: (1) competent bone-forming cells, (2) a suitable framework or scaffold, and (3) the presence of biological stimulants. Although much research has been done to develop the ideal BGS, still the results are not very consistent. In view of this, the cellularity and vascularity of the recipient site are supposed to be important for the osteoinductive capacity of BGS. Therefore, we hypothesized that a muscle recipient site could favor bone formation in a cell-based BGS compared to a subcutaneous recipient site due to the higher vascularity of muscle tissue. To prove this hypothesis, 48 titanium fiber mesh implants were seeded with rat bone marrow stromal cells (RBM) and implanted subcutaneously and intramuscularly in the adductor thigh muscle of rats. The amount of bone formation after 1, 3 and 6 weeks was evaluated by histology and histomorphometry as well as by calcium content. Analysis revealed that the bone formation increased during implantation. However, bone formation did not exceed 12% of the implant surface, both for the intramuscular and subcutaneous recipient site. Also, no significant differences in bone amount between these two sites existed. Consequently, our hypothesis could not be confirmed.
Keywords
muscle , Titanium , cell culture , Subcutis , animal model , Osteogenesis , Bone tissue engineering , Recipient site
Journal title
Biomaterials
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biomaterials
Record number
545786
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