Abstract

Sixteen unrelated beagles, randomly divided into groups of four, were used in evaluating the role of therapeutic immunosuppression in the healing of fresh cortical bone allografts over a 16‐week period. The four groups included: nontreated allograft, treated allograft, nontreated autograft, and treated autograft. A 2.7‐cm tibial cortical graft was fixed orthotopically using a dynamic compression plate. Healing was evaluated by radiography and by gross and histologic studies at 2, 4, 8, and 16 weeks after surgery. The treated dogs were immunosuppressed with azathioprine for eight weeks postsurgery. The conclusions were that: temporary immunosuppression did not significantly alter healing of fresh cortical bone autografts; healing of fresh cortical bone allografts in immunosuppressed dogs was similar to healing of fresh cortical bone autografts; slight differences were observed in the healing of bone grafts in all groups after eight weeks; and cellular reaction typical of graft rejection was found in nontreated allografts, but healing still occurred.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call