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Evaluation of a biopolymer matrix for cell based bone repair

Posted on:2009-03-16Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:The University of North Carolina at Chapel HillCandidate:Jere, DeepaliFull Text:PDF
GTID:2444390005951491Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Autogenous bone grafts are often associated with unpredictable success rates and donor site morbidity. There is clear medical need for cost-effective bone graft material that overcomes these short-comings.;Aim. To test a thermally stable, macro-porous collagen scaffold, DuraGenRTM for bone repair and study its ability to stimulate healing of critical size defects in rat calvaria engrafted with Mesenchymal Stem Cells(MSCs);Methods. Craniotomy defects, 8.9mm diameter were created in 28 adult Sprague-Dawley rats, randomly divided into four groups, 6-Empty(E), 6-Collagen only(C), 8-Collagen+MSCs(C+M), 8-Collagen+rhBMP-2(C+B). Two transgenic rats served as stromal cell donors by means of femoral marrow lavage.;Results. Bone repair at 28 days was measured using radiographs and histology. Histology showed mean bone fill of 9.25%(10.82), 19.07%(17.38), 44.21%(3.93) and 66.06%(15.08) respectively. Statistical analysis demonstrated significant differences between: E & C, C & C+M, C+B; none between C+M & C+B.;Conclusion. This study clearly displays osteogenic properties of collagen scaffold implanted with MSCs.
Keywords/Search Tags:Bone repair, Collagen scaffold
PDF Full Text Request
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