4.2 Review

Scaffold Design for Bone Regeneration

期刊

出版社

AMER SCIENTIFIC PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1166/jnn.2014.9127

关键词

Bone Tissue Engineering; Bone Graft; Scaffold; Biomaterials; Biophysical Stimulation; Biochemical Stimulation; Bone; Mesenchymal Stem Cells; Osteoblasts

资金

  1. NSF
  2. NIH [0420604, 1SC2GM089642]
  3. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [SC2GM089642] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The use of bone grafts is the standard to treat skeletal fractures, or to replace and regenerate lost bone, as demonstrated by the large number of bone graft procedures performed worldwide. The most common of these is the autograft, however, its use can lead to complications such as pain, infection, scarring, blood loss, and donor-site morbidity. The alternative is allografts, but they lack the osteoactive capacity of autografts and carry the risk of carrying infectious agents or immune rejection. Other approaches, such as the bone graft substitutes, have focused on improving the efficacy of bone grafts or other scaffolds by incorporating bone progenitor cells and growth factors to stimulate cells. An ideal bone graft or scaffold should be made of biomaterials that imitate the structure and properties of natural bone ECM, include osteoprogenitor cells and provide all the necessary environmental cues found in natural bone. However, creating living tissue constructs that are structurally, functionally and mechanically comparable to the natural bone has been a challenge so far. This focus of this review is on the evolution of these scaffolds as bone graft substitutes in the process of recreating the bone tissue microenvironment, including biochemical and biophysical cues.

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