## Abstract Calcium silicate ceramics have been proposed as new bone repair biomaterials, since they have proved to be bioactive, degradable, and biocompatible. Ξ²βtricalcium phosphate ceramic is a wellβknown degradable material for bone repair. This study compared the effects of CaSiO~3~ (Ξ±β, and Ξ²
Osteoblast-like cell mineralization induced by multiphasic calcium phosphate ceramic
β Scribed by Reed Ayers; Sheila Nielsen-Preiss; Virginia Ferguson; Guglielmo Gotolli; John J. Moore; Hans-Joachim Kleebe
- Book ID
- 103845002
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 370 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0928-4931
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β¦ Synopsis
The work presented here examines the effect of multiphasic CaP materials on the activity of SaOS-2 osteoblast like cells. Heterogeneous calcium phosphate (HCaP) was synthesized using self-propagating high temperature combustion synthesis (SHS). All samples were characterized using XRD, SEM, and FTIR. Cell culture procedures of HCaP with SaOS-2 cells followed ASTM 813-01. Samples were examined by Environmental SEM (ESEM) and EDS to characterize the mineral content of the cultures. Gold-coated samples were used for high-resolution imaging. Biomineralization was noted in unconditioned cultures exposed to HCaP while the controls (cells only in media and HCaP only in media) showed no mineralization. Calcium phosphate plate-like structures were identified adjacent to cells expressing calcium phosphate containing vesicles. These structures are similar to the organophosphate crystals seen in other published works. Plate-like crystals were noted in the larger membrane vesicles of SaOS-2 cells indicating the occurrence of cellularly mediated biomineralization.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The __in vivo__ osteoinductive capacity of porous calcium phosphate ceramics (Ca/P ceramics) with special structure and phase composition had been found for almost decades. The mechanism of the osteoinductivity of porous calcium phosphate is studied by C2C12 cells culture in this paper.
## Abstract Microstructure is indispensable for the osteoinduction of calcium phosphate ceramics. To study how microstructure takes its role and explore the mechanism of the osteoinduction, we evaluated attachment, proliferation, alkaline phosphatase (ALP)/DNA, protein/DNA, and mineralization of hu