Scientists fix fractures with 3D-printed
synthetic bone
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[September 29, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists in the United
States have successfully treated broken spines and skulls in animals
using 3D-printed synthetic bone, opening the possibility of future
personalized bone implants for humans to fix dental, spinal other bone
injuries.
Unlike real bone grafts, the synthetic material - called hyper-elastic
bone - is able to regenerate bone without the need for added growth
factors, is flexible and strong, and can be easily and rapidly deployed
in the operating room.
Giving details in a teleconference, the scientists said the results of
their animal trials - published on Wednesday in the Science
Translational Medicine journal - were "quite astounding".
Human trials could begin with five years, they said.
The team found that when used in spinal injuries in rodents and to mend
the skull of a monkey, the hyper-elastic bone, made mostly of a ceramic
and polymer, quickly integrated with surrounding tissue and began
regenerating bone.
It swiftly mended bones in the spines of the rats and healed the
monkey's skull in just four weeks, with no signs of infection or other
side effects, the scientists said.
"Another unique property ... is that it's highly porous and absorbent -
and this is important for cell and tissue integration," said Ramille
Shah of Northwestern University's department of material science,
engineering and surgery, who co-led the work.
"Even when it’s deformed or squeezed into a space, it still maintains
high porosity, and this is also very important for blood vessels to
infiltrate the scaffold so that it can further support cell and tissue
growth."
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Other types of bone grafts currently in development are often too
brittle to be shaped and handled by surgeons, and risk being
rejected once inside the body, or may be too expensive or difficult
to manufacture for widespread use.
With this hyper-elastic bone, however, many of those issues would be
overcome, said Adam Jakus, Shah's co-researcher at Northwestern
University.
"It's purely synthetic, very cheap and very easy to make," he said.
"It can be packaged, shipped and stored very nicely."
Shah she hoped these properties would mean patients in developing
countries would also benefit.
"There are a lot of pediatric patients, especially in third world
countries, who are born with orthopedic or Maxillofacial(face and
jaw bone) defects," she said. "And because the hyper-elastic bone is
scalable at a low cost, (we hope) it would be accessible to those
types of patients."
(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
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