Carboxymethyl cellulose hydroxyapatite hybrid hydrogel used to evaluate the osteogenic and odontogenic differentiation potential of dental pulp and periodontal ligament stem cells
An invitro comparative study
Keywords:
hDPSCs (human Dental pulp stem cells), hPDLSCs (human Periodontal ligament stem cells), CMC-HA (Carboxymethyl cellulose hydroxyapatite hybrid hydrogel), ALP (Alkaline phosphatase), DMP-1 Dentin matrix protein-1, RUNX-2 (Runt-related transcription factor-2)Abstract
In order to maintain optimal function, the aim of pulp treatment is to maintain the tooth structure intact. Retaining the vitality of teeth damaged due to caries or trauma is also one of the purpose of pulp treatment. In particular, the preservation of pulp vitality is essential for continuous root development and apical closure in the case of immature permanent teeth. In recent years, regenerative endodontic treatment procedures have been suggested in order to replace the damaged pulp tissue with viable tissue. The idea of regeneration of the dentin-pulp complex was introduced into endodontics to restore the vitality of young permanent teeth that have been non-vitalized due to trauma/dental caries. The concept of success in regenerative endodontic procedures is relied on three basic elements that are; stem cells, growth factors, and scaffolds. Each of these play their own important role in the regeneration of pulp-dentin complex. This invitro comparative study had intended to deal with the new experimental custom prepared semi-synthetic hybrid scaffold (CMC-HA), its acceptance for the cells (DPSCs and PDLSCs) seeded on it and osteogenic and odontogenic differentiation of both the dental pulp and periodontal ligament stem cells.
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