This study compared the osteogenic potential of two types of bovine bone blocks. Blocks were obtained by either sintered or a nonsintered process. Calvaria were surgically exposed in 20 rabbits. In each animal, six 0.5-mm-diameter cortical microperforations were drilled with a carbide bur before grafting to promote graft irrigation. The sintered (group 1) and nonsintered (group 2) bovine bone blocks (6 mm diameter, 5 mm high) were bilaterally screwed onto calvarial bone. Blocks were previously prepared from a larger block using a trephine bur. Rabbits were sacrificed after 6 and 8 weeks for the histological and histomorphometric analyses. Samples were processed using the historesin technique. The quantitative and qualitative analyses of the newly formed bone were undertaken using light microscopy. Both groups showed modest new bone formation and remodeling. At the 8-week follow-up, the sintered group displayed significantly lower bone resorption (average of 10% in group 1 and 25% in group 2) and neo-formation (12.86 ± 1.52%) compared to the nonsintered group (16.10 ± 1.29%) at both follow-ups (p < 0.05). One limitation of the present animal model is that the study demonstrates that variations in the physico-chemical properties of the bone substitute material clearly influence the in vivo behavior.

Histological and histomorphometric analyses of two bovine bone blocks implanted in rabbit calvaria / S.A. Gehrke, P. Mazon, M. Del Fabbro, M. Tumedei, J. Aramburu, L. Perez-Diaz, P.N. De Aza. - In: SYMMETRY. - ISSN 2073-8994. - 11:5(2019), pp. 641.1-641.13.

Histological and histomorphometric analyses of two bovine bone blocks implanted in rabbit calvaria

M. Del Fabbro;M. Tumedei;
2019

Abstract

This study compared the osteogenic potential of two types of bovine bone blocks. Blocks were obtained by either sintered or a nonsintered process. Calvaria were surgically exposed in 20 rabbits. In each animal, six 0.5-mm-diameter cortical microperforations were drilled with a carbide bur before grafting to promote graft irrigation. The sintered (group 1) and nonsintered (group 2) bovine bone blocks (6 mm diameter, 5 mm high) were bilaterally screwed onto calvarial bone. Blocks were previously prepared from a larger block using a trephine bur. Rabbits were sacrificed after 6 and 8 weeks for the histological and histomorphometric analyses. Samples were processed using the historesin technique. The quantitative and qualitative analyses of the newly formed bone were undertaken using light microscopy. Both groups showed modest new bone formation and remodeling. At the 8-week follow-up, the sintered group displayed significantly lower bone resorption (average of 10% in group 1 and 25% in group 2) and neo-formation (12.86 ± 1.52%) compared to the nonsintered group (16.10 ± 1.29%) at both follow-ups (p < 0.05). One limitation of the present animal model is that the study demonstrates that variations in the physico-chemical properties of the bone substitute material clearly influence the in vivo behavior.
English
Animal study; Bovine bone block; Histomorphometric analysis; Nonsintered ceramic; Rabbit calvaria; Sintered ceramic
Settore MED/50 - Scienze Tecniche Mediche Applicate
Settore MED/28 - Malattie Odontostomatologiche
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2019
MDPI
11
5
641
1
13
13
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Histological and histomorphometric analyses of two bovine bone blocks implanted in rabbit calvaria / S.A. Gehrke, P. Mazon, M. Del Fabbro, M. Tumedei, J. Aramburu, L. Perez-Diaz, P.N. De Aza. - In: SYMMETRY. - ISSN 2073-8994. - 11:5(2019), pp. 641.1-641.13.
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
7
262
Article (author)
si
S.A. Gehrke, P. Mazon, M. Del Fabbro, M. Tumedei, J. Aramburu, L. Perez-Diaz, P.N. De Aza
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
symmetry 2019 Gehrke sintered blocks.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 5.42 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
5.42 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/660873
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 23
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 22
social impact