Biological effects of bioresorbable materials in alveolar ridge augmentation: Comparison of early and slow resorbing osteosynthesis materials

5Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the bone healing properties and histological environment of a u-HA/PLLA/PGA (u-HA—uncalcined and unsintered hydroxyapatite, PLLA— Poly L-lactic acid, PGA—polyglycolic acid) composite device in humans, and to understand the histological dynamics of using this device for maxillofacial treatments. Twenty-one subjects under-went pre-implant maxillary alveolar ridge augmentation with mandibular cortical bone blocks using u-HA/PLLA or u-HA/PLLA/PGA screws for fixation. Six months later, specimens of these screws and their adjacent tissue were retrieved. A histological and immunohistochemical evaluation of these samples was performed using collagen 1a, ALP (alkaline phosphatase), and osteocal-cin. We observed that alveolar bone augmentation was successful for all of the subjects. Upon his-tological evaluation, the u-HA/PLLA screws had merged with the bone components, and the bone was directly connected to the biomaterial. In contrast, direct bone connection was not observed for the u-HA/PLLA/PGA screw. Immunohistological findings showed that in the u-HA/PLLA group, collagen 1a was positive for fibers that penetrated vertically into the bone. Alkaline phosphatase was positive only in the u-HA/PLLA stroma, and the stroma was negative for osteocalcin. In this study, u-HA/PLLA showed a greater bioactive bone conductivity than u-HA/PLLA/PGA and a higher biocompatibility for direct bone attachment. Furthermore, u-HA/PLLA was shown to have the potential for bone formation in the stroma.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Kawai, H., Sukegawa, S., Nakano, K., Takabatake, K., Ono, S., Nagatsuka, H., & Furuki, Y. (2021). Biological effects of bioresorbable materials in alveolar ridge augmentation: Comparison of early and slow resorbing osteosynthesis materials. Materials, 14(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14123286

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free