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- Peter V Giannoudis, Omar Faour, and Charlotte A Cousins.
- Department of Trauma & Orthopaedic Surgery, Clinic Universitary Hospital of Valladolid, Spain.
- Injury. 2011 Sep 1;42 Suppl 2:S87-90.
AbstractBone graft is the second most common transplantation tissue, with blood being by far the commonest. Autograft is considered ideal for grafting procedures, providing osteoinductive growth factors, osteogenic cells and an osteoconductive scaffold. Limitations, however, exist regarding donor site morbidity and graft availability. Allograft on the other hand poses the risk of disease transmission. Synthetic graft substitutes lack osteoinductive or osteogenic properties. Composite grafts combine scaffolding properties with biological elements to stimulate cell proliferation and differentiation and eventually osteogenesis. We present here an overview of bone graft substitutes available for clinical application in large cancellous voids.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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