| Literature DB >> 14741627 |
P Quinten Ruhé1, Henriette C Kroese-Deutman, Joop G C Wolke, Paul H M Spauwen, John A Jansen.
Abstract
In this study, the osteoinductive properties of porous calcium phosphate (Ca-P) cement loaded with bone morphogenetic protein 2 (rhBMP-2) were evaluated and compared with rhBMP-2 loaded absorbable collagen sponge (ACS). Discs with a diameter of 8mm were loaded with a buffer solution with or without 10 microg rhBMP-2 and inserted in 8mm full thickness cranial defects in rabbits for 2 and 10 weeks of implantation. Histological analysis revealed excellent osteoconductive properties of the Ca-P material. It maintained its shape and stability during the implantation time better than the ACS but showed no degradation like the ACS. Quantification of the Ca-P cement implants showed that bone formation was increased significantly by administration of rhBMP-2 (10 weeks pore fill: 53.0+/-5.4%), and also reached a reasonable amount without rhBMP-2 (43.1+/-10.4%). Remarkably, callus-like bone formation outside the implant was observed frequently in the 2 weeks rhBMP-2 loaded Ca-P cement implants, suggesting a correlation with the presence of growth factor in the surrounding tissue. However, an additional in vitro assay revealed an accumulative release of no more than 9.7+/-0.9% after 4 weeks. We conclude that: (1). Porous Ca-P cement is an appropriate candidate scaffold material for bone engineering. (2). Bone formation can be enhanced by lyophilization of rhBMP-2 on the cement. (3). Degradation of porous Ca-P cement is species-, implantation site- and implant dimension-specific.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 14741627 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2003.09.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479