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Osteoblast viability and detachment following exposure to ultrasound in vitro

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Abstract

Ultrasound has been used in dentistry for over 40 years and has recently been proposed for cutting bone. The purpose of this study was to establish the effects of ultrasonic instruments on osteoblasts. A 25 kHz magnetostrictive ultrasound generator and a TFI-1 tip (Dentsply, UK) were used as the ultrasound generating instruments. Primary osteoblast cultures were established from the parietal bones of two-day-old Albino Wistar rats grown on tissue culture (TC) petri dishes (Corning, UK) in αMEM (Sigma, UK). Once confluent, the osteoblasts were harvested using 0.05% trypsin in 0.02% EDTA then 1.7 × 105 cells in 2.5 ml of αMEM were either re-seeded immediately onto TC dishes and allowed to adhere for 24 h or kept in suspension before application of ultrasound with different tip displacements prior to re-seeding the cells. Osteoblast viability was assessed using 0.4% Trypan Blue following the initial dose of ultrasound then periodically over a 20 h period for both adherent and suspension osteoblasts. This study demonstrated that ultrasound caused osteoblast detachment and loss of viability in vitro, both when adherent to a substrate or in suspension. Loss of osteoblast viability was related to the maximum displacement of the ultrasonic tip and continued throughout the 20 h period observed for osteoblasts adherent to TC dishes.

© 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers

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Correspondence to R. M. Shelton.

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Sura, H., Shelton, R.M. & Walmsley, A.D. Osteoblast viability and detachment following exposure to ultrasound in vitro. Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine 12, 997–1000 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1012873402275

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1012873402275

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