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Bioactive impact of manuka honey and bone char incorporated into gelatin and chitosan cryogels in a rat calvarial fracture model.

Authors :
Robertson, E. M.
Hixon, K. R.
McBride‐Gagyi, S. H.
Sell, S. A.
Source :
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research, Part B: Applied Biomaterials; Oct2023, Vol. 111 Issue 10, p1763-1774, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Bone tissue engineered scaffolds are designed to mimic the natural environment for regeneration when typical healing is inhibited. Autografts are the current gold standard for treatment but are limited by available bone and supplementary surgical sites that broaden complications and comorbidities. Cryogels are an ideal scaffold in bone regeneration due to their mechanical integrity and marcoporous structure that elicits angiogenesis and subsequently new bone tissue formation. To aid in bioactivity and osteoinductivity, manuka honey (MH) and bone char (BC) were added to gelatin and chitosan cryogels (CG). Manuka honey has powerful antimicrobial properties to aid against graft infection, and bone char is composed of 90% hydroxyapatite, a well‐studied bioactive material. These additives are natural, abundant, easy to use, and cost effective. CG cryogels incorporated with either BC or MH, and plain CG cryogels were implanted into rat calvarial fracture models for cortical bone regeneration analysis. We found indication of bioactivity with both bone char and manuka honey through the presence of woven bone structure in histology stains and micro computed tomography (microCT) data. Overall, plain CG cryogels supported greater bone regeneration capabilities than the BC or MH incorporated cryogels due to a lack of advanced organized tissue formation and collagen deposition after 8 weeks of implantation; however, future work should explore varying additive concentrations and delivery methods to further assess additive potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15524973
Volume :
111
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research, Part B: Applied Biomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169706269
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.b.35283