Radioisotopic evaluation of bone repair after experimental surgical trauma

Authors

  • Ana Cristina Breithaupt-Faloppa University of Sao Paulo School of Dentistry; Department of Maxillofacial Surgery, Prosthesis and Traumatology
  • Pedro Fernandes Lara BeneficenciaPortuguesa Hospital; Division of Radioisotope Diagnostic Imaging
  • Marinilce Fagundes dos Santos University of Sao Paulo; Institute of Biomedical Sciences; Department of Histology and Embryology
  • Ricardo Martins Oliveira-Filho University of Sao Paulo; Institute of Biomedical Sciences; Department of Histology and Embryology
  • Oswaldo Crivello Junior University of Sao Paulo School of Dentistry; Department of Maxillofacial Surgery, Prosthesis and Traumatology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572004000100014

Keywords:

Bone repair, Scintigraphy, Light microscopy, Freeze-dried bone, Surgical trauma, Rat

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Scientific approach of the bone reaction after surgical procedures provides valuable information on methods and techniques. The purpose of this study was to follow this process using a radioisotope marker of bone remodelling. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Two bone cavities were created (one for every tibia) in adult Wistar male rats using a 0.5 mm spherical burr; left tibial cavities were filled with bovine freeze-dried bone; the right ones were left unfilled for control. Scintigrams were done with sodium methylene diphosphonate (MDP) labelled with radioactive pertechnetate (99mTcO4-) to evaluate the inflammatory response and the local osteoblastic activity. The evolution of bone repair was additionally evaluated by light microscopy. RESULTS: Our results have shown that the highest bone activity was recorded between the 7th and the 14th day after surgery. The morphological analysis confirmed the results obtained with radioisotope analysis and did not reveal significant differences regarding the evolution of bone repair between the filled and the unfilled defects. CONCLUSION: We confirmed that 99mTc -MDP is a valuable tool to study bone repair, as it was able to show subtle alterations of bone activity even in lesions as small as those created herein (0.5 mm wide, 0.5 mm deep).

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Published

2004-03-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Radioisotopic evaluation of bone repair after experimental surgical trauma . (2004). Journal of Applied Oral Science, 12(1), 78-83. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572004000100014