BOP (biocompatible osteoconductive polymer) is a material proposed for osteosyntheses and for filling of bone defects in orthopaedics, neurosurgery and stomatology. It is a composite made of a copolymer of N-vinylpyrrolidone and methylmethacrylate, of polyamide-6 fibers and of calcium gluconate. The histological investigation includes the study of 30 intact rabbit femurs instrumented with a BOP rod, as well as the study of organs of the reticuloendothelial system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortical bone grafts were implanted for six months in mature dogs using an osteoperiosteal 3-cm defect in the ulna to evaluate their respective morphometric and physical values compared with autografts. The bone-grafting material included fresh auto- and allografts, frozen and thimerosal preserved allografts, and partially demineralized bone allografts. The grafts were evaluated by roentgenograms, microradiograms, photon absorptiometry, porosity, fluorescence labeling measurements, and torsional loading at failure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Orthop Trauma Surg (1978)
July 1986
The morphological and physical aspects of cortical bone autografts implanted in dogs for 1-9 months in two differently located skeletal defects are reported with a twofold aim: to provide a reference system for further comparison with various allografts and to delineate a general pattern of cortical bone graft healing. A 3-cm osteoperiosteal gap was created in the diaphyseal segment of the ulna and fibula of mature dogs. The grafts, freed from periosteum and bone marrow, were then inverted and replaced for the autografts in the left limb bone without internal fixation or external splints.
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