Chappard D, Fressonnet C, Genty C, Baslé M F, Rebel A
Laboratoire d'Histologie-Embryologie, Faculté de Médecine, Angers, France.
Biomaterials. 1993 Jun;14(7):507-12. doi: 10.1016/0142-9612(93)90238-w.
Xenografting is a promising alternative to allografts and autografts. The remaining lipids in bone are known to influence the biocompatibility. A comparative study of wettability was done on standardized blocks of two biomaterials. A highly purified and defatted bovine bone graft (T650) was found to retain more water (2.06 g/block) than a less defatted biomaterial (T360, 0.3 g/block). Wettability, observed in the laboratory, may reflect an important in vivo property: the rapidity for extracellular fluids and blood cells to invade the graft and carry bone forming cells. When implanted in rabbit cancellous bone, T650 appears to be osteoconductive in a manner that allows trabecular architecture to be restored within 6 months.