Cargando…

Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs

Various biomaterial combinations have been studied focusing on their ability to stabilize blood clots and maintain space under soft tissue to support new bone formation. A popular combination is Deproteinized Bovine Bone Mineral (DBBM) placed with a native collagen membrane (NCM) tacked to native bo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Friedmann, Anton, Fickl, Stefan, Fischer, Kai R., Dalloul, Milad, Goetz, Werner, Kauffmann, Frederic
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35009383
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15010238
_version_ 1784630524876161024
author Friedmann, Anton
Fickl, Stefan
Fischer, Kai R.
Dalloul, Milad
Goetz, Werner
Kauffmann, Frederic
author_facet Friedmann, Anton
Fickl, Stefan
Fischer, Kai R.
Dalloul, Milad
Goetz, Werner
Kauffmann, Frederic
author_sort Friedmann, Anton
collection PubMed
description Various biomaterial combinations have been studied focusing on their ability to stabilize blood clots and maintain space under soft tissue to support new bone formation. A popular combination is Deproteinized Bovine Bone Mineral (DBBM) placed with a native collagen membrane (NCM) tacked to native bone. In this study, we compared the outcome of this treatment option to those achieved with three different graft/membrane combinations with respect to total newly occupied area and the mineralized compound inside. After bi-lateral extraction of two mandibular premolars in five adult beagles L-shaped alveolar defects were created. A total of 20 defects healed for 6 weeks resulting in chronic type bone defects. At baseline, four options were randomly allocated to five defects each: a. DBBM + NCM with a four-pin fixation across the ridge; b. DBBM + RCLC (ribose cross-linked collagen membrane); c. DBBM + NPPM (native porcine pericardium membrane); and d. Ca-sulfate (CS) + RCLC membrane. Membranes in b/c/d were not fixed; complete tensionless wound closure was achieved by CAF. Termination after 3 months and sampling followed, and non-decalcified processing and toluidine blue staining were applied. Microscopic images obtained at standardized magnification were histomorphometrically assessed by ImageJ software (NIH). An ANOVA post hoc test was applied; histomorphometric data are presented in this paper as medians and interquartile ranges (IRs). All sites healed uneventfully, all sites were sampled and block separation followed before Technovit embedding. Two central sections per block for each group were included. Two of five specimen were lost due to processing error and were excluded from group b. New bone area was significantly greater for option b. compared to a. (p = 0.001), c. (p = 0.002), and d. (p = 0.046). Residual non-bone graft area was significantly less for option d. compared to a. (p = 0.026) or c. (p = 0.021). We conclude that collagen membranes with a prolonged resorption/barrier profile combined with bone substitutes featuring different degradation profiles sufficiently support new bone formation. Tacking strategy/membrane fixation appears redundant when using these biomaterials.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8746186
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87461862022-01-11 Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs Friedmann, Anton Fickl, Stefan Fischer, Kai R. Dalloul, Milad Goetz, Werner Kauffmann, Frederic Materials (Basel) Article Various biomaterial combinations have been studied focusing on their ability to stabilize blood clots and maintain space under soft tissue to support new bone formation. A popular combination is Deproteinized Bovine Bone Mineral (DBBM) placed with a native collagen membrane (NCM) tacked to native bone. In this study, we compared the outcome of this treatment option to those achieved with three different graft/membrane combinations with respect to total newly occupied area and the mineralized compound inside. After bi-lateral extraction of two mandibular premolars in five adult beagles L-shaped alveolar defects were created. A total of 20 defects healed for 6 weeks resulting in chronic type bone defects. At baseline, four options were randomly allocated to five defects each: a. DBBM + NCM with a four-pin fixation across the ridge; b. DBBM + RCLC (ribose cross-linked collagen membrane); c. DBBM + NPPM (native porcine pericardium membrane); and d. Ca-sulfate (CS) + RCLC membrane. Membranes in b/c/d were not fixed; complete tensionless wound closure was achieved by CAF. Termination after 3 months and sampling followed, and non-decalcified processing and toluidine blue staining were applied. Microscopic images obtained at standardized magnification were histomorphometrically assessed by ImageJ software (NIH). An ANOVA post hoc test was applied; histomorphometric data are presented in this paper as medians and interquartile ranges (IRs). All sites healed uneventfully, all sites were sampled and block separation followed before Technovit embedding. Two central sections per block for each group were included. Two of five specimen were lost due to processing error and were excluded from group b. New bone area was significantly greater for option b. compared to a. (p = 0.001), c. (p = 0.002), and d. (p = 0.046). Residual non-bone graft area was significantly less for option d. compared to a. (p = 0.026) or c. (p = 0.021). We conclude that collagen membranes with a prolonged resorption/barrier profile combined with bone substitutes featuring different degradation profiles sufficiently support new bone formation. Tacking strategy/membrane fixation appears redundant when using these biomaterials. MDPI 2021-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8746186/ /pubmed/35009383 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15010238 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Friedmann, Anton
Fickl, Stefan
Fischer, Kai R.
Dalloul, Milad
Goetz, Werner
Kauffmann, Frederic
Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title_full Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title_fullStr Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title_full_unstemmed Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title_short Horizontal Augmentation of Chronic Mandibular Defects by the Guided Bone Regeneration Approach: A Randomized Study in Dogs
title_sort horizontal augmentation of chronic mandibular defects by the guided bone regeneration approach: a randomized study in dogs
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746186/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35009383
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15010238
work_keys_str_mv AT friedmannanton horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs
AT ficklstefan horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs
AT fischerkair horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs
AT dalloulmilad horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs
AT goetzwerner horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs
AT kauffmannfrederic horizontalaugmentationofchronicmandibulardefectsbytheguidedboneregenerationapproacharandomizedstudyindogs