Rabbit Calvarial Wound Healing Using Seeded Caprotite Scaffolds - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Rabbit Calvarial Wound Healing Using Seeded Caprotite Scaffolds

Mark Mooney, Jay Calvert, Jeffrey O. Hollinger, Kacey Marra, Lee Weiss, Phil Campbell, Prashant Kumta, and Sean Bidic
Journal Article, Journal of Dental Research, Vol. 82, No. 2, pp. 131 - 135, February, 2003

Abstract

Autologous bone is the most successful bone-grafting material; however, limited supply and donor site morbidity are problematic. Synthetic bone substitutes are effective, but healing is slow and unpredictable. Osseous wound healing may be enhanced if bone substitutes are combined with autologous bone marrow cells. To test this hypothesis, we created 40 calvarial defects in 20 12-week-old New Zealand White rabbits, divided into four groups: (1) unrepaired controls, (2) autologous bone grafts, (3) unseeded Caprotite® (a polymer-ceramic composite) grafts, and (4) Caprotite® grafts seeded with autologous bone marrow stromal cells. CT scans were obtained at 0, 6, and 12 weeks post-operatively, and defects were harvested for histology. Defects repaired with autologous bone had significantly (p < 0.05) more bone than the other three groups, although seeded Caprotite® defects showed different wound-healing sequelae. Results suggest that seeded Caprotite® scaffolds did not significantly enhance osseous defect healing compared with controls.

BibTeX

@article{Mooney-2003-16873,
author = {Mark Mooney and Jay Calvert and Jeffrey O. Hollinger and Kacey Marra and Lee Weiss and Phil Campbell and Prashant Kumta and Sean Bidic},
title = {Rabbit Calvarial Wound Healing Using Seeded Caprotite Scaffolds},
journal = {Journal of Dental Research},
year = {2003},
month = {February},
volume = {82},
number = {2},
pages = {131 - 135},
}