Inflammation in Bone Tissue Regeneration:
Delayed healing or nonhealing of bone is an important
clinical concern. Although bone, one of the two tissues with scar-free healing
capacity, heals in most cases, healing is delayed in more than 10% of clinical
cases. Treatment of such delayed healing condition is often painful, risky,
time consuming, and expensive. Tissue healing is a multistage regenerative
process involving complex and well-orchestrated steps, which are initiated in
response to injury. At best, these steps lead to scar-free tissue formation. At
the onset of healing, during the inflammatory phase, stationary and attracted
macrophages and other immune cells at the fracture site release cytokines in
response to injury. This initial reaction to injury is followed by the
recruitment, proliferation, and differentiation of mesenchymal stromal cells,
synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins, angiogenesis, and finally tissue
remodeling. Failure to heal is often associated with poor revascularization.
Since blood vessels mediate the transport of circulating cells, oxygen,
nutrients, and waste products, they appear essential for successful healing.
The strategy of endogenous regeneration in a tissue such as bone is interesting
to analyze since it may represent a successful tissue formation.
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