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The local environment and the defect features have made the skull one of the most difficult regions to repair. Finding alternative strategies to repair large cranial defects, thereby avoiding the current limitations of autograft or polymeric and ceramic prostheses constitute an unmet need. In this study, the regeneration of an 8 mm critical-sized calvarial defect treated by autograft or by a monetite scaffold directly placed in the defect or preimplanted (either cranial bone transplant or subcutaneous pocket) and then transplanted within the bone defect is compared. The data reveal that transplantation of preimplanted monetite transplant scaffolds greatly improves the skull vault closure compared to subcutaneously preimplanted or directly placed materials. Autografts, while clearly filling the defect volume with bone appear effective since bone volume inside the defect volume is obviously high, but are not well fused to the skull. The preimplantation site has a large influence on the regeneration of the defect. Transplantation of induced bone inside materials has the potential to reduce the need for autograft harvest without damaging the skeleton. This first demonstration indicates that cranial repair may be possible without recourse to bioactives or cultured cell therapies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.201900722 | DOI Listing |
Critical-sized bone defects present significant clinical challenges due to inadequate vascularization and scaffold integration. This study developed a multifunctional 3D-printed polycaprolactone (PCL)-gelatin (Gel) scaffold reinforced with Bioglass particles (BGPs) or copper dopped BGPs (CuBGPs) to synergistically enhance angiogenesis and bone regeneration in rat model. The scaffolds were fabricated by infiltrating gelatin solutions containing BGPs or CuBGPs into the pores of 3D-printed PCL matrices, followed by freeze-drying.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Arizona, 85254, USA.
Conventional bone grafts such as xenografts, allografts, and synthetic substitutes are widely used in regenerative dentistry, but their biological performance remains suboptimal. To address this limitation, this study investigates the effect of multifunctional peptide amphiphile (PA) nanofiber coatings on graft bioactivity. Peptide amphiphile molecules incorporating osteoinductive (DGEA-PA), mineralization-promoting (EEE-PA), adhesive (DOPA-PA), and antimicrobial (GL13K-PA) sequences were synthesized via Fmoc-based solid-phase peptide synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioact Mater
December 2025
School of Pharmacy, the Key Laboratory of Prescription Effect and Clinical Evaluation of State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine of China, Binzhou Medical University, Yantai, 264003, PR China.
Critical-sized calvarial defects remain a formidable clinical challenge due to dyssynchronous immunomodulation-osteogenesis coupling and unregulated growth factor release. Here, a bioinspired porous core-shell microsphere system (GCI@HPPS) is developed, integrating hydroxyapatite (HA)-loaded shell, surface-immobilized SDF-1α, and IGF-1-encapsulated cores to immunomodulate osteoimmune microenvironment and osteogenesis promotion. The hierarchical architecture achieved spatiotemporally programmed release: HA degradation-dependent mineralization, SDF-1α-mediated BMSC chemotaxis, and sustained IGF-1 delivery, mimicking natural bone repair cascades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Craniofac Surg
August 2025
Department of Veterinary Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Burdur Mehmet Akif Ersoy University, Burdur, Turkey.
Objective: We examined the effect of locally administered abaloparatide (ABL), alone or combined with an autogenous graft, on new bone formation in critical-sized calvarial defects in postmenopausal rats.
Method: Thirty-two ovariectomized rats were divided into 4 equal groups: control (C), ABL, autogenous (O), and ABL+O. Each rat received an 8-mm calvarial defect with a trephine drill.
Bioimpacts
July 2025
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Shahid Chamran University of Ahvaz, Ahvaz, Iran.
Introduction: In this study, we utilized human endometrial mesenchymal stem cells (EnMSCs), along with a novel fibrous nanocomposite scaffold made of polyacrylonitrile/metal-organic-framework (PAN/MOF-Cu) for bone tissue engineering. Additionally, we investigated the impact of graphene quantum dots (GQDs) as a stimulant for promoting osteogenic regeneration.
Methods: To assess our approach's effectiveness, four groups of rats were evaluated for the extent of bone tissue regeneration in their calvarial defects, 10 weeks post-surgery.