Bone formation in transforming growth factor beta-1-coated porous poly(propylene fumarate) scaffolds.
Publication year
2002Source
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research, 60, 2, (2002), pp. 241-251ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Plastic Surgery
Periodontology and Biomaterials
Journal title
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research
Volume
vol. 60
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 241
Page end
p. 251
Subject
Implantology and biomaterials; Implantologie en biomaterialenAbstract
This study determined the bone growth into pretreated poly(propylene fumarate) (PPF) scaffolds implanted into a subcritical size, rabbit cranial defect. PPF scaffolds were constructed by using a photocrosslinking-porogen leaching technique. These scaffolds were then either prewetted (PPF-Pw), treated with RF glow-discharge (PPF-Gd), coated with fibronectin (PPF-Fn), or coated with rhTGF-beta1 (PPF-TGF-beta1). One of each scaffold type was then placed into the cranium of nine rabbits. The rabbits were sacrificed after 8 weeks, and the scaffolds were retrieved for histological analysis. The most bone formation was present in the PPF-TGF-beta1 implants; the newly formed bone had a trabecular appearance together with bone marrow-like tissue. Little or no bone formation was observed in implants without rhTGF-beta1. These histological findings were confirmed by image analysis. Bone surface area, bone area percentage, pore fill percentage, and pore area percentage were significantly higher in the rhTGF-beta1-coated implants than in the noncoated implants. No statistical difference was seen between the PPF-Fn, PPF-Pw, or PPF-Gd scaffolds for these parameters. Quadruple fluorochrome labeling showed that in PPF-TGF-beta1 implants bone formation mainly started in the interior of a pore and proceeded toward the scaffold. We conclude that (a) PPF-TGF-beta1 scaffolds can indeed adequately induce bone formation in porous PPF, and (b) PPF scaffolds prepared by the photocrosslinking-porogen leaching technique are good candidates for the creation of bone graft substitutes.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [204994]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [81051]
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