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In vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models for dental pulp regeneration

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10856-023-06718-2

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Based on the concept of tissue engineering, regenerative endodontics aims to preserve dental pulp vitality or regenerate pulp-like tissue in necrotic root canals. Various in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models have been used to improve tissue engineering methods for pulp regeneration. This review explores the evolution of these laboratory models and discusses the challenges in establishing reproducible models.
Based on the concept of tissue engineering (Cells-Scaffold-Bioactive molecules), regenerative endodontics appeared as a new notion for dental endodontic treatment. Its approaches aim to preserve dental pulp vitality (pulp capping) or to regenerate a vascularized pulp-like tissue inside necrotic root canals by cell homing. To improve the methods of tissue engineering for pulp regeneration, numerous studies using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models have been performed. This review explores the evolution of laboratory models used in such studies and classifies them according to different criteria. It starts from the initial two-dimensional in vitro models that allowed characterization of stem cell behavior, through 3D culture matrices combined with dental tissue and finally arrives at the more challenging ex vivo and in vivo models. The travel which follows the elaboration of such models reveals the difficulty in establishing reproducible laboratory models for dental pulp regeneration. The development of well-established protocols and new laboratory ex vivo and in vivo models in the field of pulp regeneration would lead to consistent results, reduction of animal experimentation, and facilitation of the translation to clinical practice.

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