Published January 1, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Polysaccharide-bioceramic composites for bone tissue engineering: A review

Description

Limitations associated with conventional bone substitutes such as autografts, increasing demand for bone grafts, and growing elderly population worldwide necessitate development of unique materials as bone graft substitutes. Bone tissue engineering (BTE) would ensure therapy advancement, efficiency, and cost-effective treatment modalities of bone defects. One way of engineering bone tissue scaffolds by mimicking natural bone tissue composed of organic and inorganic phases is to utilize polysaccharide-bioceramic hybrid composites. Polysaccharides are abundant in nature, and present in human body. Biominerals, like hydroxyapatite are present in natural bone and some of them possess osteoconductive and osteoinductive properties. Ion doped bioceramics could substitute protein-based biosignal molecules to achieve osteogenesis, vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, and stress shielding. This review is a systemic summary on properties, advantages, and limitations of polysaccharidebioceramic/ion doped bioceramic composites along with their recent advancements in BTE.

Files

bib-d2d77c30-1029-48a5-9cbd-ca2632fc3455.txt

Files (220 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:8ab286e5304229600b8e62bfb88a24f2
220 Bytes Preview Download