Repair of mandible defect with tissue engineering bone in rabbits

ANZ J Surg. 2005 Nov;75(11):1017-21. doi: 10.1111/j.1445-2197.2005.03586.x.

Abstract

Background: The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of tissue engineering bone composed of bone marrow-derived osteoblasts and demineralized bone in repairing mandible defect.

Methods: Bone marrow-derived osteoblasts of 20 rabbits were cultured and seeded into scaffold of allogeneic demineralized bone to construct tissue engineering bone graft in vitro, which was used to repair the 10 x 5-mm bone defect made in the same rabbit mandible edge. Implant of demineralized bone alone was as the control. Rabbits were killed according to the schedule: five after 2 weeks, five after 4 weeks, five after 8 weeks, five after 12 weeks, and the implants were harvested for gross, radiographic, and histological observation.

Results: New bone formation at the margin region of defect and osteogenesis at the centre were observed in the implant of tissue engineering bone, and the bone formation pattern included osteogenesis, osteoconduction, and osteoinduction. In the implant of demineralized bone alone, the major bone formation pattern was 'creeping substitute'.

Conclusions: The tissue engineering bone graft constructed by autogenous bone marrow-derived osteoblasts and allogeneic demineralized bone was better than demineralized bone alone in bone formation capability, which might be an ideal graft for bone defect repair.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bone Transplantation / methods*
  • Mandible / pathology*
  • Mandible / surgery*
  • Osteoblasts / transplantation
  • Osteogenesis / physiology
  • Rabbits
  • Tissue Engineering / methods*