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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University of Melbourne Researchers