Particularities of Bone Regeneration in Rats after Implantation of Polycaprolactone Scaffold Mineralized with Vaterite with Adsorbed Tannic Acid


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Abstract

We studied the particularities of osteo- and angiogenesis in albino rats after implantation of polycaprolactone scaffolds mineralized with vaterite with adsorbed tannic acid in the femoral bone defect. It was found that the processes of angio- and osteogenesis in the bone tissue after scaffolds implantation depend on their biocompatibility. Implantation of non-biocompatible scaffolds was followed by activation of angio- and osteogenesis aimed at separation of these scaffold from surrounding tissues. Implantation of polycaprolactone/vaterite scaffolds containing tannic acid stimulated angio- and osteogenesis leading to vascularization and bone tissue formation in the matrix. This demonstrate prospects of clinical approbation of these scaffolds for stimulation of bone regeneration in traumatological and orthopedic patients.

About the authors

E. V. Gladkova

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

V. V. Blinnikova

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

I. V. Babushkina

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

B. V. Parakhonskiy

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

V. Yu. Ulyanov

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

I. A. Norkin

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

A. N. Ivanov

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Author for correspondence.
Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

M. S. Saveleva

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

M. O. Kurtukova

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov

S. V. Kustodov

Research Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics, and Neurosurgery, V. I. Razumovsky Saratov State Medical University, Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation

Email: lex558452@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Saratov


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