Part II: Crystalline Fluorapatite-Coated Hydroxyapatite Implant Material: A Dog Study With Histologic Comparison of Osteogenesis Seen With FA-Coated HA Grafting Material Versus HA Controls: Potential Bacteriostatic Effect of Fluoridated HA

Author:

Nordquist William D1,Okudera Hajima2,Kitamura Yutaka2,Kimoto Kazunari2,Okudera Toshimitsu2,Krutchkoff David J3

Affiliation:

1. Private practice, Implant Dentistry of San Diego, Calif

2. Division of Oral Health, Department of Health Science, Kanagawa Dental College, Kanagawa, Japan, and Tokyo Plastic Dental Society, Oji Dental Clinic Aesthetic Surgery, Tokyo, Japan

3. Department of Oral Pathology, University of Connecticut School of Dental Medicine, Farmington, Conn

Abstract

Abstract Success of osteogenesis in bone graft procedures can be enhanced by inhibiting oral bacterial infections through the use of prophylactic bacteriostatic fluoride within the grafting environment. Ideally, the fluoride ion should be chemically sequestered and thus unavailable unless needed at times during the process of early infection. As fluoride within fluorapatite is tightly bound at neutral pH and becomes available only during acidic conditions, fluorapatite is an ideal store for the fluoride ion which becomes released for bacteriostasis only during an acidic environment found with incipient bacterial infection. The purpose of this investigation was to compare the histologic properties of new bone formed surrounding fluorapatite (FA)-coated microcrystalline hydroxyapatite (HA) grafting material with comparable bone formed following the use of control HA material (OsteoGen, Impladent, Ltd, Holliswood, NY). The results of histologic analysis within dog studies here showed no detectable difference in new bone following therapeutic grafting procedures using each of the above 2 mineral coatings.

Publisher

American Academy of Implant Dentistry

Subject

Oral Surgery

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