4.7 Review

Current Stage of Marine Ceramic Grafts for 3D Bone Tissue Regeneration

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 17, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md17080471

Keywords

marine ceramic grafts; calcium phosphate; bone tissue regeneration; osteoinductive properties; structural strength; dissolution rate

Funding

  1. European Union from Interreg V-A Spain-Portugal (POCTEP 2015) [0245_IBEROS_1_E, 0302_CVMAR_I_1_P]
  2. INTERREG Atlantic Area, European Regional Development Fund [BLUEHUMAN EAPA_151/2016]
  3. Competitive Reference Groups (GRC) from Xunta de Galicia (Spain) [ED431C 2016/008, ED431C 2017_51]
  4. Research networks from Xunta de Galicia (Spain) [ED431D 2017/13]
  5. EU Interreg V-A Spain-Portugal (POCTEP) project [0245_IBEROS_1_E]

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Bioceramic scaffolds are crucial in tissue engineering for bone regeneration. They usually provide hierarchical porosity, bioactivity, and mechanical support supplying osteoconductive properties and allowing for 3D cell culture. In the case of age-related diseases such as osteoarthritis and osteoporosis, or other bone alterations as alveolar bone resorption or spinal fractures, functional tissue recovery usually requires the use of grafts. These bone grafts or bone void fillers are usually based on porous calcium phosphate grains which, once disposed into the bone defect, act as scaffolds by incorporating, to their own porosity, the intergranular one. Despite their routine use in traumatology and dental applications, specific graft requirements such as osteoinductivity or balanced dissolution rate are still not completely fulfilled. Marine origin bioceramics research opens the possibility to find new sources of bone grafts given the wide diversity of marine materials still largely unexplored. The interest in this field has also been urged by the limitations of synthetic or mammalian-derived grafts already in use and broadly investigated. The present review covers the current stage of major marine origin bioceramic grafts for bone tissue regeneration and their promising properties. Both products already available on the market and those in preclinical phases are included. To understand their clear contribution to the field, the main clinical requirements and the current available biological-derived ceramic grafts with their advantages and limitations have been collected.

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