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Advanced biomaterials for repairing and reconstruction of mandibular defects

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.msec.2019.109858

Keywords

Mandibular defects; Biomaterials; Bone materials; Post-reconstruction; Drug-loaded bioscaffolds

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [K112222616, 81671028]
  2. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission-Gaofeng Clinical Medicine Grant Support [20171906]
  3. Shanghai Talent Development Fund [2018099]

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Mandibles are the largest and strongest bone in the human face and are often severely compromised by mandibular defects, compromising the quality of life of patients. Mandibular defects may result from trauma, inflammatory disease and benign or malignant tumours. The reconstruction of mandibular defect has been a research hotspot in oral and maxillofacial surgery. Although the principles and techniques of mandibular reconstruction have made great progress in recent years, the development of biomedical materials is still facing technical bottleneck, and new materials directly affect technological breakthroughs in this field. This paper reviews the current status of research and application of various biomaterials in mandibular defects and systematically elaborates different allogeneic biomaterial-based approaches. It is expected that various biomaterials, in combination with new technologies such as digital navigation and 3D printing, could be tuned to build new types of scaffold with more precise structure and components, addressing needs of surgery and post-reconstruction. With the illustration and systematization of different solutions, aims to inspire the development of reconstruction biomaterials.

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