Abstract

Treatment of large bone defects is one of the great challenges in contemporary orthopedic and traumatic surgery. Grafts are necessary to support bone healing. A well-established allograft is demineralized bone matrix (DBM) prepared from donated human bone tissue. In this study, a fibrous demineralized bone matrix (f-DBM) with a high surface-to-volume ratio has been analyzed for toxicity and immunogenicity. f-DBM was transplanted to a 5-mm, plate-stabilized, femoral critical-size-bone-defect in Sprague-Dawley (SD)-rats. Healthy animals were used as controls. After two months histology, hematological analyses, immunogenicity as well as serum biochemistry were performed. Evaluation of free radical release and hematological and biochemical analyses showed no significant differences between the control group and recipients of f-DBM. Histologically, there was no evidence of damage to liver and kidney and good bone healing was observed in the f-DBM group. Reactivity against human HLA class I and class II antigens was detected with mostly low fluorescence values both in the serum of untreated and treated animals, reflecting rather a background reaction. Taken together, these results provide evidence for no systemic toxicity and the first proof of no basic immunogenic reaction to bone allograft and no sensitization of the recipient.

Highlights

  • Treatment of large bone defects is one of the great challenges in contemporary orthopedic and traumatic surgery

  • In this study we examined toxicity, immunogenic behavior and osteogenicity two months after a fibrous demineralized bone matrix (DBM) (f-DBM) preparation was transplanted into a plate-stabilized, femoral critical-size-bone-defect of 5 mm in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats

  • The final weight at the day of sacrifice was significantly higher in the treated animals than in the control group

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Summary

Introduction

Treatment of large bone defects is one of the great challenges in contemporary orthopedic and traumatic surgery.

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