4.7 Article

Gear-shaped carbonate apatite granules with a hexagonal macropore for rapid bone regeneration

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL AND STRUCTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue -, Pages 2514-2523

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2023.03.053

Keywords

Granules; Bone; Grafts; Calcium phosphate; Scaffold; Bio ceramics

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A new type of bone repair material, gear-shaped granules (G-GRNs), was reported for rapid bone healing, which formed new bone and blood vessels at the rabbit femur defect sites. Compared with conventional carbonate apatite granules, G-GRNs showed advantages in bone percentage and absorption, providing a basis for the design and fabrication of synthetic bone grafts.
Synthetic bone grafts are in high demand owing to increased age-related bone disorders in the global aging population. Here, we report fabrication of gear-shaped granules (G-GRNs) for rapid bone healing. G-GRNs possessed six protrusions and a hexagonal macropore in the granular center. These were composed of carbonate apatite, i.e., bone mineral, microspheres with -1-mu m micropores in the spaces between the microspheres. G-GRNs formed new bone and blood vessels (both on the granular surface and within the macropores) 4 weeks after implantation in the rabbit femur defects. The formed bone structure was similar to that of cancellous bone. The bone percentage in the defect recovered to that in a normal rabbit femur at week-4 post-implantation, and the bone percentage remained constant for the following 8 weeks. Throughout the entire period, the bone percentage in the G-GRN-implanted group was -10% higher than that of the group implanted with conventional carbonate apatite granules. Furthermore, a portion of the GGRNs resorbed at week-4, and resorption continued for the following 8 weeks. Thus, G-GRNs are involved in bone remodeling and are gradually replaced with new bone while maintaining a suitable bone level. These findings provide a basis for the design and fabrication of synthetic bone grafts for achieving rapid bone regeneration.(c) 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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