Abstract

Introduction. In the field of orthopaedic surgery, the use of osteogenic material in larger defects is essential. Autograft and allograft are both known methods, and autograft is believed to be the best choice. But autograft is associated with additional invasive procedures which can prove difficult in fragile patients and can cause local side effect after bone harvest. For feasible purposes, the use of allograft is hereby rising and comparing efficacies, and the differences between autograft and allograft are essential for the clinical outcome for the patients. Method 24 female Norwegian brown rats were included, 12 normal rats and 12 induced with osteoporosis (OP). OP inducement was verified in vivo by bone volume fraction (BV/TV) at 90 days after ovariectomy (OVX). The primary surgery in each rat consisted of a 2.5 × 3 mm hole in the proximal tibia, bilaterally. Autograft and allograft were randomly allocated in the right and left tibia. After an observation of 21 days, the rats were sacrificed. Tibia samples were harvested, micro-CT scanned for bone inducement and microarchitectural properties, and then embedded for histology. Results The OP induction was verified three months after the OVX by a reduction of 68.5% in the trabecular bone BV/TV compared to normal bone. Microarchitectural analysis and histology showed no significant differences in the bone-forming capabilities between autograft and allograft in normal or osteoporotic bone after 3 weeks. Conclusion This study did not demonstrate any difference between autograft and allograft in a normal or osteoporotic rat tibial defect model after 21 days, suggesting allograft is a good alternative to autograft.

Highlights

  • In the field of orthopaedic surgery, the use of osteogenic material in larger defects is essential

  • Autograft bone is considered as a “living” material bearing osteogenic, osteoinductive, and osteoconductive properties [3] and should provide the best treatment, where allograft consists of inactive “dead” bone with mainly osteoconductive properties [4]

  • Bone volume showed no significant difference between the autograft and allograft groups within the normal and osteoporotic bone

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Summary

Introduction

In the field of orthopaedic surgery, the use of osteogenic material in larger defects is essential. Failure rates in autograft bone graft surgeries have been shown to be 50% caused by different types of harvesting, handling, implantation method used, and differences between patient conditions and bone vitality [5]. Due to these complications and high costs, allogenous bone material is often used as an alternative graft material. Allogenous bone is gathered conveniently without side effect from other patients This graft material has mainly osteoconductive effect [6] and has the potential risks of disease transmission, bacterial infections, autoimmune host response, and graft host nonunions.

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