Abstract

The aim of the current study was to visualize new bone formed in vivo on a small intestine submucosa (SIS) sponge used as a tissue-engineered scaffold for the repair of damaged bone. The SIS sponge provided a three-dimensional pore structure, and supported good attachment and viability of rat bone marrow stem cells (rBMSCs). To examine bone regeneration, we prepared full-thickness bilateral bone defects in the rat crania, and then treated the defects with an implanted SIS sponge or PGA mesh without or with rBMSCs, or left the defects untreated. Bone defects were evaluated by micro-CT and histologically after 2 and 4 weeks. Micro-CT demonstrated a trend toward a decrease in bone void in both the SIS sponge and SIS sponge/rBMSCs groups compared to the control and PGA mesh groups. At 4 weeks, bone formation in defects containing SIS sponge/rBMSCs was significantly greater than in all other groups. A histological analysis after 2 and 4 weeks of implantation showed localized collagen and osteocalcin deposition on SIS sponges and SIS sponges with rBMSCs. These in vivo results indicate that the SIS sponge, implanted at bone-removal defects, facilitated bone regeneration.

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