A Chemosterilized Antigen-Extracted Autodigested Alloimplant for Bone Banks
- 1 April 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 110 (4) , 416-428
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1975.01360100058011
Abstract
Limited chemical extraction of hydrophobic glycopeptides and subtotal autodigestion of the donor's cells and plasma membranes in undemineralized cortical bone in vitro reduces the putative quantity of haptenic substances absorbable by the recipient. Iodoacetic acid and sodium azide or other sulfhydryl group enzyme inhibitors added to the buffer solutions during in vitro autodigestion and extraction of intracellular alloantigens protects the bone matrix morphogenetic property against enzymatic degradation. The delayed hypersensitivity reaction induced by aseptically collected freeze-dried bone and the destruction of the bone morphogenetic property caused by radiation-sterlization is avoidable by sequential chemodigestion and chemosterilization of bone that preserves the maximum morphogenetic potential while transferring a minimum quantity of alloantigen.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enzymes in Bone Morphogenesis: Endogenous Enzymic Degradation of the Morphogenetic Property in Bone in Solutions Buffered by Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid (EDTA)Published by Wiley ,1973
- The Substratum for Bone Morphogenesis11This work was aided by a grant-in-aid from The John A. Hartford Foundation, Inc., and in part by grants-in-aid from the USPHS, National Institute of Dental Research (DE-02103), Ayerst Laboratories, Inc., and the Orthopedic Research and Education Foundation; and in part by a contract between the U. S. Army Research and Development Command (DA-49-193 MD-2556) and the University of California.Published by Elsevier ,1971
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