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Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes

The indication-oriented Dental Bone Graft Substitutes (DBGS) selection, the correct bone defects classification, and appropriate treatment planning are very crucial for obtaining successful clinical results. However, hydrophilic, viscoelastic, and physicochemical properties’ influence on the DBGS re...

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Autores principales: Trajkovski, Branko, Jaunich, Matthias, Müller, Wolf-Dieter, Beuer, Florian, Zafiropoulos, Gregory-George, Houshmand, Alireza
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5848912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29385747
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020215
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author Trajkovski, Branko
Jaunich, Matthias
Müller, Wolf-Dieter
Beuer, Florian
Zafiropoulos, Gregory-George
Houshmand, Alireza
author_facet Trajkovski, Branko
Jaunich, Matthias
Müller, Wolf-Dieter
Beuer, Florian
Zafiropoulos, Gregory-George
Houshmand, Alireza
author_sort Trajkovski, Branko
collection PubMed
description The indication-oriented Dental Bone Graft Substitutes (DBGS) selection, the correct bone defects classification, and appropriate treatment planning are very crucial for obtaining successful clinical results. However, hydrophilic, viscoelastic, and physicochemical properties’ influence on the DBGS regenerative potential has poorly been studied. For that reason, we investigated the dimensional changes and molecular mobility by Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) of xenograft (cerabone(®)), synthetic (maxresorb(®)), and allograft (maxgraft(®), Puros(®)) blocks in a wet and dry state. While no significant differences could be seen in dry state, cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®) blocks showed a slight height decrease in wet state, whereas both maxgraft(®) and Puros(®) had an almost identical height increase. In addition, cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®) blocks remained highly rigid and their damping behaviour was not influenced by the water. On the other hand, both maxgraft(®) and Puros(®) had a strong increase in their molecular mobility with different damping behaviour profiles during the wet state. A high-speed microscopical imaging system was used to analyze the hydrophilicity in several naturally derived (cerabone(®), Bio-Oss(®), NuOss(®), SIC(®) nature graft) and synthetic DBGS granules (maxresorb(®), BoneCeramic(®), NanoBone(®), Ceros(®)). The highest level of hydrophilicity was detected in cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®), while Bio-Oss(®) and BoneCeramic(®) had the lowest level of hydrophilicity among both naturally derived and synthetic DBGS groups. Deviations among the DBGS were also addressed via physicochemical differences recorded by Micro Computed Tomography, Scanning Electron Microscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-ray powder Diffractometry, and Thermogravimetric Analysis. Such DBGS variations could influence the volume stability at the grafting site, handling as well as the speed of vascularization and bone regeneration. Therefore, this study initiates a new insight into the DBGS differences and their importance for successful clinical results.
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spelling pubmed-58489122018-03-14 Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes Trajkovski, Branko Jaunich, Matthias Müller, Wolf-Dieter Beuer, Florian Zafiropoulos, Gregory-George Houshmand, Alireza Materials (Basel) Article The indication-oriented Dental Bone Graft Substitutes (DBGS) selection, the correct bone defects classification, and appropriate treatment planning are very crucial for obtaining successful clinical results. However, hydrophilic, viscoelastic, and physicochemical properties’ influence on the DBGS regenerative potential has poorly been studied. For that reason, we investigated the dimensional changes and molecular mobility by Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (DMA) of xenograft (cerabone(®)), synthetic (maxresorb(®)), and allograft (maxgraft(®), Puros(®)) blocks in a wet and dry state. While no significant differences could be seen in dry state, cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®) blocks showed a slight height decrease in wet state, whereas both maxgraft(®) and Puros(®) had an almost identical height increase. In addition, cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®) blocks remained highly rigid and their damping behaviour was not influenced by the water. On the other hand, both maxgraft(®) and Puros(®) had a strong increase in their molecular mobility with different damping behaviour profiles during the wet state. A high-speed microscopical imaging system was used to analyze the hydrophilicity in several naturally derived (cerabone(®), Bio-Oss(®), NuOss(®), SIC(®) nature graft) and synthetic DBGS granules (maxresorb(®), BoneCeramic(®), NanoBone(®), Ceros(®)). The highest level of hydrophilicity was detected in cerabone(®) and maxresorb(®), while Bio-Oss(®) and BoneCeramic(®) had the lowest level of hydrophilicity among both naturally derived and synthetic DBGS groups. Deviations among the DBGS were also addressed via physicochemical differences recorded by Micro Computed Tomography, Scanning Electron Microscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-ray powder Diffractometry, and Thermogravimetric Analysis. Such DBGS variations could influence the volume stability at the grafting site, handling as well as the speed of vascularization and bone regeneration. Therefore, this study initiates a new insight into the DBGS differences and their importance for successful clinical results. MDPI 2018-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5848912/ /pubmed/29385747 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020215 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Trajkovski, Branko
Jaunich, Matthias
Müller, Wolf-Dieter
Beuer, Florian
Zafiropoulos, Gregory-George
Houshmand, Alireza
Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title_full Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title_fullStr Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title_full_unstemmed Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title_short Hydrophilicity, Viscoelastic, and Physicochemical Properties Variations in Dental Bone Grafting Substitutes
title_sort hydrophilicity, viscoelastic, and physicochemical properties variations in dental bone grafting substitutes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5848912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29385747
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020215
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