2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2012.12.031
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Hybrid matrix grafts to favor tissue regeneration in rabbit femur bone lesions

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
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“…We developed a model of bone lesion in a New Zealand rabbit femur, which does not resolve spontaneously, with the generation of a fibrous tissue that does not have the original characteristics of the tissue prior to the injury, in order to use it to consider the osteoregenerative potential characteristic of the scaffolds to be tested [21] [22] [23].…”
Section: Gineering Journal Of Biomaterials and Nanobiotechnologymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We developed a model of bone lesion in a New Zealand rabbit femur, which does not resolve spontaneously, with the generation of a fibrous tissue that does not have the original characteristics of the tissue prior to the injury, in order to use it to consider the osteoregenerative potential characteristic of the scaffolds to be tested [21] [22] [23].…”
Section: Gineering Journal Of Biomaterials and Nanobiotechnologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Antibiotic prophylaxis and anesthetic treatment were performed according to a procedure previously described [23]. Prior to the surgical procedure, rabbits re-…”
Section: Pre-surgical Preparationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No es mucha la literatura que brinde información sobre los cambios que acontecen en el proceso de crecimiento y desarrollo de conejos y en particular de sus fémures (Thomsen et al, 1991;Lerner y Kuhn, 1997;Martiniaková et al, 2003). Numerosos experimentos de biología ósea y medicina regenerativa se han realizado utilizando como modelo experimental conejos, en particular en la línea New Zealand (CoNZ), previos a la implementación de protocolos en humanos, (Goy et al, 2012;Coletta et al, 2014;Cícero et al, 2017a;Coletta et al, 2017), lo que reafirma la necesidad de obtener información precisa al respecto. Dado que no existe información actualizada que describa en profundidad los estadios del desarrollo y crecimiento de CoNZ, el objetivo de nuestro estudio fue investigar al respecto, realizando análisis a niveles imagenológicos e histológicos.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified