Publication | Open Access
Observation of the bone matrix structure of intact and regenerative zones of tibias by atomic force microscopy
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Citations
7
References
2001
Year
Tissue EngineeringAtomic Force MicroscopyEngineeringBone RepairRegenerative ZonesSurgeryAnatomyBiomedical EngineeringBone TissueOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryBiomechanicsBone RemodelingRat TibiaMechanobiologyBone ImagingBone Matrix StructureFracture HealingWound HealingMedicine
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to comparatively study the structure of the bone matrix of rat tibia from an intact region with that from regions submitted to surgical injury. We used young male adult rats (Wistar), with corporal masses between 250 and 300 g. Each injury was provoked by drilling a 1.5-mm-diam hole in one cortical tibia surface. The healing course was monitored at 8 and 15 days after the injury. Atomic force microscopy images, at different magnifications, allowed the identification of the time dependence of the osteoblast activity, measured by the increase in the area of neoformed primary bone and in the organization of the collagen fibers of the bone matrix. Characterization of the natural recovery of the damaged bone tissue by AFM is potentially of great importance because it allows the comparison of natural recovery processes with those induced by medicines and other therapeutic procedures.
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