|
|
|
|
| Synthetic bone graft recruits stem cells for faster bone healing
Synthetic bone graft recruits stem cells for faster bone healing
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-08/qmuo-sbg080210.php
Scientists have developed a material for bone grafts that could one day replace the 'gold
standard' natural bone implants.
A new study shows how particles of a ceramic called calcium phosphate have the ability to
stimulate promising bone regrowth by attracting stem cells and 'growth factors' to promote
healing and the integration of the grafted tissue.
"The rate of bone repair we see with these materials rivals that of traditional grafts
using a patients' own bone," said Professor Joost de Bruijn from the School of Engineering
and Materials Science at Queen Mary, University of London. "And what sets it apart from
other synthetic graft substitutes is its ability to attract stem cells and the body's natural
growth factors, which coincide to form new, strong, natural bone around an artificial
graft."
The researchers tested natural bone grafts against ceramic particles with varied structural and
chemical properties. They found that micro-porous ceramic particles composed of calcium
phosphate, the primary component of bone ash, induced stem cells to develop into bone cells in
the test tube and stimulated bone growth in live tissue in mice, dogs and sheep.
Bone injuries packed with the ceramic particles healed similarly to implants constructed from
the animals' own bone, reports Professor de Bruijn along with collaborators from the University
of Twente, Netherlands, in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The
study also shows how it also matches a commercially available product that contains artificial
growth factors and has the undesirable side-effect of causing bone fragments to form in nearby
soft tissue, such as muscle.
Although the researchers have not yet identified the mechanism that drives bone growth in the
synthetic implants, they note that variations in the ceramic material's chemistry,
micro-porosity, micro-structure, and degradation influence the graft's performance.
The study suggests that biomaterials-based bone grafts can manipulate cell behaviour in order
to repair injury, and one day may be used to repair bone injuries in humans.
Aug. 2, 2010 (EurekAlert)
|
|
|
Licenţa de Ministerul Sănătăţii din Ucraina seria AG № 570573 din 10.03.2011
Licenta de Ministerul Sănătăţii din Ucraina seria AB № 511037 din 03.12.2009 ©
Institutul de terapie celulară 2004-2011
|