The Effect of Demineralized Bone Matrix on the Healing of Intramembranous Bone Grafts in Rabbit Skull Defects
Open Access
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Dental Research
- Vol. 75 (4) , 1045-1051
- https://doi.org/10.1177/00220345960750040701
Abstract
A clinical dilemma exists regarding the type of bone that should be used to replace diseased or traumatized osseous tissue. Oral, plastic, and orthopedic surgeons normally implant viable mineralized endochondral (EC) autografts or demineralized EC allografts. A few clinicians have recognized the disadvantages of using EC bone in craniofacial surgery and advocated the replacement of intramembranous (IM) bone with healthy IM bone. However, controversy and uncertainty surround our understanding of these matrices to induce bone formation. Recent studies have advocated the use of other materials with osteoinductive properties, such as demineralized bone matrix (DBM). The proposed delivery system used in this study included IM bone grafts, DBM, and fixation of the IM bone graft. The purpose of this work was to gain further insights into the mechanism of healing of IM bone, in both the presence and the absence of DBM, and to compare the healing of IM bone grafts with that of DBM alone. Critical-sized (10 x 5 mm), full-thickness bony defects in rabbit parietal bone, devoid of periosteum, were filled with IM bone graft (mandible) alone, demineralized cortical bone matrix (DBM) alone, or combined DBM-IM bone graft, or were left unfilled. Histologic changes were examined 14 days later. The IM bone graft healed through IM ossification with no intermediate cartilage stage. DBM and composite DBM-IM healed through an EC ossification with an intermediate cartilage stage. It is hypothesized that the role of the IM graft is to induce neovascularization into the defect site, and that the undifferentiated mesenchymal cells in the perivascular region of the new blood vessels are induced by the bone morphogenetic protein(s) in the DBM into bone-forming cells.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intramembranous bone matrix is osteoinductiveThe Anatomical Record, 1994
- Osteogenic enhancement of diaphyseal reconstruction: Comparison of bone grafts in the rabbitActa Orthopaedica, 1990
- Novel Regulators of Bone Formation: Molecular Clones and ActivitiesScience, 1988
- The Results of 39 Fractures Complicated by Major Segmental Bone Loss and/or Leg Length DiscrepancyPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1984
- Histological investigation of bone induction by demineralized allogeneic bone matrix: A natural biomaterial for osseous reconstructionJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 1983
- Induced Osteogenesis for Repair and Construction in the Craniofacial RegionPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1980
- Bone Morphogenetic ProteinJournal of Dental Research, 1971
- 29 Bone Formation in Implants of Partially and Wholly Demineralized Bone MatrixClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1970
- 24 The Bone Induction PrincipleClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1967
- Bone: Formation by AutoinductionScience, 1965