Journal article
Efficacy of novel synthetic bone substitutes in the reconstruction of large segmental bone defects in sheep tibiae
JJ Li, SI Roohani-Esfahani, CR Dunstan, T Quach, R Steck, S Saifzadeh, P Pivonka, H Zreiqat
Biomedical Materials Bristol | Published : 2016
Abstract
The treatment of large bone defects, particularly those with segmental bone loss, remains a significant clinical challenge as current approaches involving surgery or bone grafting often do not yield satisfactory long-term outcomes. This study reports the evaluation of novel ceramic scaffolds applied as bone graft substitutes in a clinically relevant in vivo model. Baghdadite scaffolds, unmodified or modified with a polycaprolactone coating containing bioactive glass nanoparticles, were implanted into critical-sized segmental bone defects in sheep tibiae for 26 weeks. Radiographic, biomechanical, μ-CT and histological analyses showed that both unmodified and modified baghdadite scaffolds were..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Australian Research Council (LP0991099), the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and the Rebecca L Cooper Medical Research Foundation. The authors also thank Dr Simon Pearce and the staff of QUT's Medical Engineering Research Facility (MERF) for veterinary assistance and technical support.