Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible

Few investigations on guided bone regeneration (GBR) focus on the behaviour of tissues adjacent to barrier membranes. This study was conducted to (1) evaluate the barrier function potential of different resorbable and nonresorbable membranes for GBR, (2) investigate their structural changes after di...

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Main Authors: Frank P. Strietzel, Pathawee Khongkhunthian, Rutch Khattiya, Prapas Patchanee, Peter A. Reichart
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-616812018-09-11T08:58:27Z Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible Frank P. Strietzel Pathawee Khongkhunthian Rutch Khattiya Prapas Patchanee Peter A. Reichart Engineering Materials Science Few investigations on guided bone regeneration (GBR) focus on the behaviour of tissues adjacent to barrier membranes. This study was conducted to (1) evaluate the barrier function potential of different resorbable and nonresorbable membranes for GBR, (2) investigate their structural changes after different intervals, and (3) characterize tissue composition and reaction adjacent to the barrier by qualitative histologic evaluation. Seven barriers for GBR were used per animal (made of dense or expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (d/ePTFE), titanium, polyetherurethane, collagen and two polylactide- polyglycolide-/-trimethylenecarbonate-co-polymers (PLPG, LPGTC) in standardized defects not exceeding the critical size) without using bone substitution material or autogenous bone at the right inferior margin of the mandibles of six domestic pigs. Samples of the defect areas with membranes were harvested after 2 days (one animal), 4 and 8 (two animals, each) and 12 weeks (one animal), respectively. The healing of bone defects was completed in all animals after 12 weeks. Nonresorbable barriers prevented the soft tissue in-growth into standardized defects. Thinner layers of fibrous tissue were seen underneath the dense and rigid barriers (dPTFE, titanium) when compared with collagen and PLPG/LPGTC, in which soft-tissue plugs occupied the crestal defect portion. PLPG-/LPGTC-barriers underwent structural changes after 4 weeks and revealed blistered central layers, whereas structural changes were not evident in nonresorbable barriers. The degradation of PLPG-/LPGTC-membranes was present with ingrowth of fibres, vessels, and cells. Using collagen or synthetic polymer barriers for GBR, the application of bone or bone substitutes to prevent membrane prolapse into the defect is suggested. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. 2018-09-11T08:56:57Z 2018-09-11T08:56:57Z 2006-07-01 Journal 15524981 00219304 2-s2.0-33745684762 10.1002/jbm.b.30452 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=33745684762&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/61681
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Engineering
Materials Science
spellingShingle Engineering
Materials Science
Frank P. Strietzel
Pathawee Khongkhunthian
Rutch Khattiya
Prapas Patchanee
Peter A. Reichart
Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
description Few investigations on guided bone regeneration (GBR) focus on the behaviour of tissues adjacent to barrier membranes. This study was conducted to (1) evaluate the barrier function potential of different resorbable and nonresorbable membranes for GBR, (2) investigate their structural changes after different intervals, and (3) characterize tissue composition and reaction adjacent to the barrier by qualitative histologic evaluation. Seven barriers for GBR were used per animal (made of dense or expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (d/ePTFE), titanium, polyetherurethane, collagen and two polylactide- polyglycolide-/-trimethylenecarbonate-co-polymers (PLPG, LPGTC) in standardized defects not exceeding the critical size) without using bone substitution material or autogenous bone at the right inferior margin of the mandibles of six domestic pigs. Samples of the defect areas with membranes were harvested after 2 days (one animal), 4 and 8 (two animals, each) and 12 weeks (one animal), respectively. The healing of bone defects was completed in all animals after 12 weeks. Nonresorbable barriers prevented the soft tissue in-growth into standardized defects. Thinner layers of fibrous tissue were seen underneath the dense and rigid barriers (dPTFE, titanium) when compared with collagen and PLPG/LPGTC, in which soft-tissue plugs occupied the crestal defect portion. PLPG-/LPGTC-barriers underwent structural changes after 4 weeks and revealed blistered central layers, whereas structural changes were not evident in nonresorbable barriers. The degradation of PLPG-/LPGTC-membranes was present with ingrowth of fibres, vessels, and cells. Using collagen or synthetic polymer barriers for GBR, the application of bone or bone substitutes to prevent membrane prolapse into the defect is suggested. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
format Journal
author Frank P. Strietzel
Pathawee Khongkhunthian
Rutch Khattiya
Prapas Patchanee
Peter A. Reichart
author_facet Frank P. Strietzel
Pathawee Khongkhunthian
Rutch Khattiya
Prapas Patchanee
Peter A. Reichart
author_sort Frank P. Strietzel
title Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
title_short Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
title_full Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
title_fullStr Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
title_full_unstemmed Healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - A histologic study in the porcine mandible
title_sort healing pattern of bone defects covered by different membrane types - a histologic study in the porcine mandible
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=33745684762&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/61681
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