In Vivo Study of Osseointegrable Bone Calcium Phosphate (CaP) Implants Coated with a Vanillin Derivative
Serena Medaglia, Patricia Bernabé-Quispe, Julia Tomás-Chenoll, María Cebriá-Mendoza, María Ángeles Tormo-Mas, Víctor Javier Primo-Capella, Andrea Bernardos, María Dolores Marcos, José Luis Peris-Serra, Elena Aznar, Ramón Martínez-Máñez

TL;DR
This study explores vanillin-coated bone implants to prevent infections while maintaining bone integration in rabbits.
Contribution
Vanillin-coated calcium phosphate implants show antimicrobial properties without affecting bone integration.
Findings
Vanillin-functionalized CaP scaffolds showed strong bactericidal activity at 24 hours.
In vivo osseointegration was not significantly affected by vanillin coating.
Vanillin-coated implants maintained a high safety profile for clinical use.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Orthopaedic infections associated with implant surgery remain a major public health concern, often caused by bacterial colonization of implant surfaces. Staphylococcus epidermidis is among the most common pathogens involved. Developing antimicrobial bone implants that prevent infection without compromising bone regeneration is therefore essential. This study investigates the antimicrobial and osteointegrative performance of calcium phosphate (CaP) materials functionalized with vanillin, an essential oil component with known antimicrobial properties. Methods: Commercial CaP regenerative materials were covalently coated with vanillin. Antibacterial activity was evaluated against Staphylococcus epidermidis RP62A using viability assays. In vivo osseointegration was assessed in New Zealand female rabbits implanted with vanillin-coated and uncoated CaP scaffolds.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone Tissue Engineering Materials · Biochemical and biochemical processes · Infectious Aortic and Vascular Conditions
