“Silver dust”—a tool to study growth interrelationships between bone, periosteum and muscle
- 1 August 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Anatomical Record
- Vol. 194 (4) , 539-545
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.1091940407
Abstract
A cylinder of gelatin containing silver spongy granules was placed in and lay within the masseter muscle, the periosteum, and the mandible, and terminated in the medial pterygoid muscle of young (3 month‐old) growing miniature pigs.On the basis of an animal sacrificed one week after placement of the cylinder, it was found that the suspending gelatin was removed by cellular activity. Nine months later the remaining animals were sacrificed. Periodic X‐rays were taken during the course of the experiment. After sacrifice, the mandible and associated tissues were histologically examined. The results of this study suggest that the silver granules in the muscles maintained their location during growth; the silver granules in the mandible moved forward with mandibular growth. “Slippage” appeared to occur external to the fibrous layer of the periosteum; the site of movement was revealed by the trail of the silver granules. The described method should prove of value in studying the growth interrelationships between bone, periosteum, and muscle.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Papillary muscle shortening in the intact dog; a cinderadiographic study of tranquilized dogs in the upright position.Circulation Research, 1975
- Adaptability of rabbit digastric muscle to an abrupt change in length: A radiographic studyArchives of Oral Biology, 1974
- An Experimental Study of the Effects of Growth on the Relationship of Tendons and Ligaments to Bone at the Site of Diaphyseal InsertionActa Orthopaedica, 1970