Correction of Coronal Suture Synostosis Using Suture and Dura Mater Allografts in Rabbits with Familial Craniosynostosis

Author:

Mooney Mark P.1,Burrows Annie M.23,Smith Timothy D.23,Losken H. Wolfgang45,Opperman Lynne A.6,Dechant Jason7,Kreithen Amy M.3,Kapucu Rusen8,Cooper Gregory M.7,Ogle Roy C.9,Siegel Michael I.10

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Oral Medicine and Pathology, Anthropology, Surgery–Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, and Orthodontics, and Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

2. School of Physical Therapy, Slippery Rock University, Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania

3. Department of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh.

4. Department of Surgery–Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Children's Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

5. Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

6. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Baylor College of Dentistry, Texas A &M University Health Sciences Center, Dallas, Texas.

7. Specialist IIs, Department of Anatomy & Histology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

8. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

9. Department of Neurological Surgery, Cell Biology, and Plastic Surgery, and Craniofacial Research, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.

10. Departments of Anthropology and Orthodontics, and Cleft Palate-Craniofacial Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Abstract

Objective: Resynostosis following surgical correction of craniosynostosis is a common clinical correlate. Recent studies suggest that the dura mater is necessary to maintain suture patency. It has also been hypothesized that dura mater from synostotic individuals may provide aberrant biochemical signals to the osteogenic fronts of the calvaria, which result in premature suture fusion and subsequent resynostosis following surgery. This study was designed to test this hypothesis by surgically manipulating the coronal suture and dura mater in rabbits with familial craniosynostosis to prevent postsurgical resynostosis. Design: Craniofacial growth and histomorphometric data were collected from 129 rabbits: 72 normal controls and 57 rabbits with bilateral coronal suture synostosis (15 unoperated on controls; 13 surgical controls; 9 dura mater transplant only; 10 suture transplant only; and 10 suture and dura mater transplant). At 10 days of age, all rabbits had radiopaque amalgam markers placed on either side of the coronal, frontonasal, and anterior lambdoidal sutures. At 25 days of age, 42 synostosed rabbits had a 3 to 5-mm wide coronal suturectomy. Coronal sutures and/or underlying dura mater allografts were harvested from same-aged, wild-type, isohistogenic control rabbits and transplanted onto the dura mater of synostosed host rabbits. Serial radiographs were taken at 10, 25, 42, and 84 days of age, and the suturectomy sites were harvested at 84 days of age in 44 rabbits and serially sectioned for histomorphometric examination. Results: Results revealed that cranial vault growth was significantly (p < .05) improved following surgical release of the fused coronal suture compared with synostosed rabbits who were not operated on but was still significantly different (p < .05) from that of normal control rabbits. By 84 days of age, significant (p < .05) differences were noted in calvarial suture marker separation, cranial vault shape indices, and cranial base angles between rabbits with and without dura mater allografts, probably as a result of resynostosis of the suturectomy site or suture-only allografts. Qualitative histological examination revealed that at 84 days of age rabbits with suture and dura allografts had patent coronal sutures, suture-only allografts had fused coronal sutures with extensive endosteal hyperostosis, dura mater–only allografts had some new bone in the suturectomy site that resembled rudimentary osteogenic fronts, and suturectomy controls had extensive endosteal bone formation and resynostosis of the suturectomy site. Significantly (p < .05) more bone was found in the suturectomy sites of rabbits without dura mater allografts compared with rabbits with dura mater allografts. Conclusions: Results support the initial hypothesis that normal dura mater allografts will maintain suture or suturectomy site patency and allow unrestricted craniofacial growth. However, it is still unclear whether the dura mater from normal rabbits was providing biochemical signals to the transplanted sutures or suturectomy sites or simply acting as a barrier to prevent abnormal biochemical signals from the dura mater of synostosed rabbits from reaching the calvaria. The clinical and therapeutic implications of these procedures are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Oral Surgery

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