Click here to download it in pdf
08H00 - 09H50 PLENARY ROOM
S26 SYNDROMIC CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
Chairpersons: E. Arnaud (France), J. Bradley (USA)
08H01 (3’)
S26.1 NORMOCEPHALIC PANCRANIOSYNOSTOSIS RESULTING IN LATE PRESENTATION OF ELEVATED
INTRACRANIAL PRESSURES
R. Foo, L. A. Whitaker, S. P. Bartlett
08H05 (3’)
S26.2 CONSISTENCIES IN CEPHALOFACIAL GROWTH PATTERNING IN PATIENTS WITH APERT SYNDROME
N. Minugh-Purvis, R. Foo, J. Huynh, R. F. Mayro, S. P. Bartlett, L. A. Whitaker
08H09 (3’)
S26.3 A NEW APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT OF SYNDROMIC CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
R. D. Hayward, D. Dunaway, J. Britto, R. Evans, B. Jones
08H13 (3’)
S26.4 PFEIFFER SYNDROME - A TREATMENT EVALUATION
J. L. Rhodes, J. A. Fearon
08H17 (3’)
S26.5 MERCEDES BENZ PATTERN CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
J. L. Rhodes, J. A. Fearon
08H20 (5’) DISCUSSION
08H25 (3’)
S26.7 LONG-TERM SURGICAL OUTCOMES OF PATIENTS TREATED FOR TWIST1-CONFIRMED SAETHRE CHOTZEN SYNDROME
R. Foo, Y. Guo, D. M. McDonald-McGinn, D. M. Steinbacher, E. H. Zackai, L. A. Whitaker, S. P. Bartlett
08H29 (3’)
S26.8 INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE CHANGES IN CHILDREN WITH APPARENTLY NON-SYNDROMIC UNICORONAL SYNOSTOSIS
K. A. Eley, D. Johnson, A. Wilkie, J. Jayamohan, P. Richards, S. Wall
08H33 (3’)
S26.9 REOPERATION FOR INTRACRANIAL HYPERTENSION IN TWIST1 CONFIRMED SAETHRE-CHOTZEN SYNDROME
R. H. Woods, E. Ul-haq, A. O. M. Wilkie, J. Jayamohan, P. G. Richards, D. Johnson, T. Lester, S. A. Wall
08H37 (3’)
S26.10 CLINICAL FEATURES OF DELAYED CRANIAL PANSYNOSTOSIS
J. E. Clune, J. M. Stoler, A. K. Greene, M. R. Proctor, J. G. Meara, J. B. Mulliken, G. F. Rogers
08H41 (3’)
S26.11 INCIDENCE OF RAISED INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE IN PATIENTS WITH CROUZON’S SYNDROME
G. S. Abu-Sitta, D. Dunaway, R. Hayward, K. Nishal, A. Liasis, D. Thompson
08H44 (5’) DISCUSSION
08H49 (6’)
S26.13 NEUROSURGICAL PRIORITIES OF MULTIDSCIPLINARY MANAGEMENT OF EXTREME FACIOCRANIOSYNOSTOSIS :
EXPANDING THE SKULL VERSUS SHUNTING
F. Di Rocco, E. Arnaud, L. Roisin, S. James, D. Nowinski, P. Meyer, C. Sainte-Rose, V. Couloigner, M. Morisseau Durand, P. Diner,
C. Tomat, D. Renier
08H56 (3’)
S26.14 RAISED INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE IN PFEIFFERS SYNDROME
N. U. O. Jeelani, A. Khan, A. White, D. Dunaway, R. Hayward
09H00 (3’)
S26.15 THE PLACE OF ENDOSCOPIC THIRD VENTRICULOSTOMY IN CHILDREN WITH FACIOCRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
F. Di Rocco, C. Juca, C. Sainte-Rose, E. Arnaud, D. Renier
09H04 (3’)
S26.16 CLOVERLEAF CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS AND HYDROCEPHALUS
G. Machado, F. Di Rocco, P. Meyer, D. Marchac, E. Arnaud, D. Renier
09H07 (5’) DISCUSSION
09H12 (6’)
S26.18 PFEIFFER SYNDROME: THE CHALLENGING SYNDROMIC CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
A. V. H. Greig, J. Wagner, S. M. Warren, B. H. Grayson, J. G. McCarthy
09H19 (3’)
S26.19 NON-SYNDROMIC COMPLEX CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
M. Czerwinski, J. Kolar, J. A. Fearon
09H23 (3’)
S26.20 SEQUENCE OF CRANIO-FRONTO-ORBITAL RECONSTRUCTION IN SYNDROMIC PANSYNOSTOSIS ASSISTED
WITH DISTRACTION OSTEOGENESIS AND TISSUE EXPANSION
V. K. Singhal
09H27 (3’)
S26.21 CEREBRAL EXPANSION AND EXTERNAL LUMBAR DRAINAGE AFTER FRONTO-FACIAL MONOBLOC ADVANCEMENT
F. Di Rocco, E. Arnaud, P. Meyer, D. Renier
09H30 (5’) DISCUSSION
09H35 (3’)
S26.23 QUANTITATIVE MORPHOMETRIC OUTCOMES FOLLOWING THE MELBOURNE METHOD OF TOTAL VAULT
REMODELLING FOR SCAPHOCEPHALY
R. Toma, R. P. Teixeira, A. D. Holmes, L. A. Ellis, S. K. Williams, A. Costa, D. R. McKay, D. Chong, A. L. Greensmith
09H39 (3’)
S26.24 RESULTS OF EARLY SURGERY FOR SCAPHOCEPHALY: EVOLUTION OF A TECHNIQUE
M. van Veelen, O. Eelkman Rooda, I. Mathijssen, L. van Adrichem
09H43 (3’)
S26.25 OUTCOME ANALYSIS OF OUR FIRST 100 CASES OF SPRING ASSISTED SURGERY FOR THE TREATMENT OF
SCAPHOCEPHALY
L. R. David, S. Glazier, D. Couture, C. Sanger, L. Argenta
09H46 (4’) DISCUSSION
09H50 - 10H20
Coffee break in Exhibition Hall (University Suite)
Posters viewing in Oriel Room
10H20 - 12H15 PLENARY ROOM
S27NON SYND CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
Chairpersons: L. David (USA), L. Van Adrichem (The Netherlands), S. Bartlett (U.K.)
10H20 (3’)
S27.1 SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF SAGITTAL SYNOSTOSIS IN INFANTS: TREATMENT OUTCOMES, CT-BASED
MORPHOMETRIC ASSESSMENT AND COMPLICATIONS
C. R. Forrest, D. Chong, D. J. Murray, P. Dirks, A. Kulkarni
10H24 (3’)
S27.2 THE MANAGEMENT OF ISOLATED SAGITTAL SYNOSTOSIS IN THE ABSENCE OF SCAPHOCEPHALY:
A CASE SERIES OF EIGHT
D. G. Morritt, J. Yen, S. A. Wall, P. Richards, J. Jayamohan, D. Johnson
10H27 (3’)
S27.3 MANAGEMENT OF SHUNT RELATED SAGITTAL SYNOSTOSIS
X. Doorenbosch, C. J. Molloy, S. Santoreneos, D. J. David, P. J. Anderson
10H31 (3’)
S27.4 NEW MORPHOMETRIC PARAMETERS FOR SCAPHOCEPHALY ASSESSMENT: SAGITTAL INDEX AND VERTEX SHIFT
R. P. Teixeira, A. A. Heggie, A. D. Holmes, L. A. Ellis, S. K. Williams, D. Chong, A. L. Greensmith
10H34 (3’)
S27.6 LIMITED INCISION STRIP CRANIECTOMY: IS THE ENDOSCOPICASSISTED APPROACH TO SINGLE-SUTURE
CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS SAFE?
M. A. Kerr-Valentic, J. Kestle, F. A. Siddiqi
10H38 (3’)
S27.7 LIMITED INCISION SAGITTAL STRIP CRANIECTOMY AND POSTOPERATIVE HELMET THERAPY:
REVIEW OF A MULTI-CENTER EXPERIENCE
A. Mitchell, D. G. Genecov, B. E. Weprin, F. H. Sklar, J. C. Kolar, C. Hobar
10H41 (3’)
S27.8 RESULTS OF ENDOSCOPICALLY-ASSISTED SUTURECTOMY AND POST-OPERATIVE HELMET THERAPY TO TREAT
SAGITTAL SYNOSTOSIS
G. Rogers, J. Berry-Candelario, E. Ridgeway, R. Grondin, M. R. Proctor
10H44 (5’) DISCUSSION
10H49 (3’)
S27.9 SPRING CRANIOPLASTY ALTERS THE GROWTH VECTORS OF ADJACENT CRANIAL SUTURES
C. Davis, C. Lauritzen
10H53 (3’)
S27.10 CRANIAL EXPANSION BY DISTRACTION FOR CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS IN JAPAN: COMBINED REPORT
OF 231 OPERATIONS AND OUR CONSENSUS
S. Kyutoku, Y. Komuro, Y. Sugawara, A. Hirano, K. Imai, T. Miyawaki, K. Satoh
10H57 (3’)
S27.11 DISTRACTION OSTEOGENESIS IN THE CORRECTION OF CONGENITAL PLAGIOCAPHELY
X. Mu, D. Cao, G. Chai, Z. Yu
11H00 (5’) DISCUSSION
11H05 (3’)
S27.12 ANALYSIS OF BRAIN MALFORMATIONS IN SYNDROMIC CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS AND PSYCHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
J. M. G. Florisson, M. Maliepaard, M. Lequin, I. M. J. Mathijssen
11H08 (3’)
S27.13 THE IMPACT OF THE AGE OF SURGERY ON LONG-TERM NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL OUTCOMES IN SAGITTAL
CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
A. Patel, D. Bridgett, J. A. Persing
11H12 (3’)
S27.14 NEURODEVELOPMENTAL FUNCTIONING AND GENOTYPE IN INFANTS WITH ISOLATED CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
A. C. Da Costa, S. J. Knight, V. A. Anderson, S. Reilly, A. Bialocerkowski, A. D. Holmes, D. K. Chong, A. L. Greensmith, R. Savarirayan
11H15 (3’)
S27.15 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOLOGICAL OUTCOMES IN CHILDREN WITH NON-SYNDROMIC,
SINGLE-SUTURE CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS: ASSESSING 3 YEAR OLDS POSTSURGICAL INTERVENTION
H. Care, M. Knapp, J. Reed, C. Godber, D. Hearst
11H19 (3’)
S27.16 POST-OPERATIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL OUTCOMES DURING INFANCY AND EARLY CHILDHOOD IN ISOLATED
CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
A. C. Da Costa, D. K. Chong, A. D. Holmes, J. G. Meara, A. L. Greensmith
11H22 (3’)
S27.17 PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS IN 86 TRIGONOCEPHALY PATIENTS
J. J. B. Vlugt van der, J. J. N. M. Meulen van der, H. E. Creemers, E. R. Hovus, J. M. E. Okkerse
11H25 (5’) DISCUSSION
11H30 (3’)
S27.18 SQUAMOSAL SUTURE SYNOSTOSIS: AN UPDATE ON A CAUSE OF ATYPICAL SKULL ASYMMETRY
J. M. Smartt, Jr., D. J. Singh, R. R. Reid, J. C. Hellinger, V. M. Hsu, S. P. Bartlett
11H33 (3’)
S27.19 PROGRESSIVE MULTISUTURE SYNOSTOSIS AND PAPILLORDEMA FOLLOWING METOPTIC
CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS REPAIR
P. P. Sun, S. T. Koseoglu, B. A. Toth
11H37 (3’)
S27.20 INTRACRANIAL DEFORMITIES IN METOPIC SYNSOSTOSIS
J. van der Meulen, J. van der Vlugt, A. Stolwijk, J. Okkerse, L. van Adrichem, I. Mathijssen, M. Lequin
11H41 (3’)
S27.21 LATE CRANIAL VAULT EXPANSION BY DISTRACTION FOR SYMPTOMATIC CEPHALOCRANIAL DISPROPORTION
A. D. Denny
11H44 (3’)
S27.22 SPRING ASSISTED POSTERIOR VAULT DISTRACTION FOR RAISED INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE – A REVIEW OF
OUR FIRST YEAR’S WORKLOAD OF 15 CASES
N. U. O. Jeelani, A. Khan, A. White, D. Dunaway, R. Hayward
11H47 (5’) DISCUSSION
11H52 (3’)
S27.23 DOES THE INCIDENCE OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN CHILDREN INCREASE FOLLOWING CRANIOFRONTAL SURGERY?
M. S. Gilardino, S. Jandali, L. A. Whitaker, S. P. Bartlett
11H55 (3’)
S27.24 PERIOPERATIVE CORTICOSTEROID REDUCES HOSPITAL STAY FOLLOWING FRONTO-ORBITAL ADVANCEMENT
J. E. Clune, G. F. Rogers, C. Guo, L. Gao, S. Kim, J. G. Meara, M. R. Proctor, J. B. Mulliken, A. K. Greene
11H59 (3’)
S27.25 THE ORIGIN OF TEMPORAL HOLLOWING
J. van der Meulen, J. Willemsen, J. van der Vlugt, P. Nazir, L. van Adrichem, E. Ongkosuwito, I. Mathijssen, M. Vaandrager
12H02 (3’)
S27.26 DEVELOPMENT OF A NOVEL ADHESIVE RESORBABLE PLATING SYSTEM FOR CRANIOFACIAL RECONSTRUCTION:
ANALYSIS OF FRONTAL AND ORBITAL OSTEOTOMY FIXATION
J. Weinzweig, J. V. Manchio, S. Sati, S. A. Jain, K. Panter, Q. Wu, A. Shrivastava, S. McCarthy
12H05 (3’)
S27.27 PAEDIATRIC CRANIAL VAULT DEFECTS: EARLY EXPERIENCE WITH VITOSS BONE GRAFT SUBSTITUTE
D. J. Singh, N. Biskup, S. P. Beals, E. F. Joganic, K. Manwaring
12H08 (7’) DISCUSSION
12H15 - 13H30
Lunch break in Exhibition Hall (University Suite)
Posters viewing (Oriel Room)
13H30 - 14H20 PLENARY ROOM
S28 IMAGING
Chairpersons: J. Persing (USA), A. Stratoudakis (Greece)
13H30 (3’)
S28.1 A VIRTUAL SURGICAL ATLAS FOR THE TREATMENT OF CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS. PART I – THREE-DIMENSIONAL DIGITAL
MODELING OF CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS DEFORMITIES
R. L. Flores, B. H. Grayson, A. Oliker, J. G. McCarthy
13H34 (3’)
S28.2 A VIRTUAL SURGICAL ATLAS FOR THE TREATMENT OF CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS. PART II – SURGICAL ANIMATIONS
R. L. Flores, A. Oliker, J. G. McCarthy
13H38 (3’)
S28.3 QUANTITATIVE EVALUATION OF CRANIOFACIAL SURGICAL OUTCOMES IN METOPIC SYNOSTOSIS WITH THREEDIMENSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
R. P. Teixeira, S. K. Williams, L. A. Ellis, A. Costa, A. D. Holmes, D. Chong, A. L. Greensmith
13H42 (3’)
S28.4 THREE DIMENSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPARISON OF EARLY POST-OPERATIVE FACIAL AND FOREHEAD SYMMETRY IN PATIENTS WITH UNILATERAL CORONAL SYNOSTOSIS: FRONTOORBITAL ADVANCEMENT VS. SUTURECTOMY AND HELMET THERAPY
S. P. K. Tan, M. R. Proctor, J.B. Muliken, G. F. Rogers
13H46 (3’)
S28.5 MEASURING CRANIAL VAULT VOLUME WITH 3D PHOTOGRAPHY: A NOVEL APPROACH TO QUANTITATIVELY
EVALUATING OUTCOMES IN SURGERY FOR CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
D. R. McKay, S. K. Williams, L. A. Ellis, K. M. Davidge, R. P. Texeira, D. K. Chong, A. L. Greensmith, A. D. Holmes
13H49 (5’) DISCUSSION
13H54 (3’)
S28.6 CT SCANS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF NON-SYNDROMIC SINGLE SUTURE CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS: INCIDENTAL FINDINGS
AND ROLE IN MANAGEMENT
C. R. Forrest, B. Rechner
13H58 (3’)
S28.7 DIAGNOSTIC PAEDIATRIC CT SCANS OF THE HEAD: ACTUAL DOSAGE VS. ESTIMATED RISK
D. Jaffurs, A. D. Denny
14H02 (3’)
S28.8 COMPREHENSIVE MORPHOLOGIC ANALYSIS OF CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS
L. F. Domeshek, M. Schoemann, A. Harijan, S. Saba, S. Mukundan, J. Van Aalst, J. Marcus
14H06 (3’)
S28.9 THREE-DIMENSIONAL VOLUMETRIC APPROACH TO EVALUATING THE MORPHOLOGY AND QUANTIFYING THE AIRWAY
SPACE IN CRANIOFACIAL ANOMALIES
G. Captier, P. A. Diner, M. Bigorre, C. Baumler, A. Picard
14H10 (3’)
S28.10 ANATOMIC STUDY OF THE MAXILLO-MANDIBULAR RELATIONSHIP IN HUMAN FETUSES :
INTRODUCTION TO A PRENATAL CEPHALOMETRY
G. Captier, J. Faure, M. Baumler, F. Canovas, F. Bonnel, J. Daures
14H13 (7’) DISCUSSION
14H20 - 15H20 PLENARY ROOM
S29-A SCIENCE AND RESEARCH PART 1
Chairpersons: A. Wilkie (U.K.), M. Longaker (USA)
14H20 (6’)
S29.A.1 USE OF RHBMP-2 AND MASTERGRAFT (TM) IN THE REPAIR OF CRANIAL DEFECTS IN CHILDREN
D. G. Genecov, C. R. Barceló, B. E. Weprin, L. R. Opperman
14H27 (3’)
S29.A.2 INKJET BASED BIO-PATTERNING OF BMP2 AND NOGGIN TO SPATIALLY CONTROL BONE FORMATION IN VIVO
M. R. Bykowski, G. M. Cooper, E. D. Miller, E. L. Lensie, G. E. DeCesare, A. Usas, J. Huard, L. E. Weiss, J. E. Losee, P. G. Campbell
14H30 (3’)
S29.A.3 THE DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF BMP-2 AND 9 IN CRITICALSIZED, MURINE CRANIAL DEFECTS
I. A. Seitz, L. Spiguel, C. M. Teven, C. Wietholt, M. Januzek, R. Hayden, H. H. Luu, T. He, R. R. Reid
14H34 (3’)
S29.A.4 RHBMP-2 INDUCES BONE FORMATION IN LARGE CRANIAL DEFECTS IN THE PRESENCE OF REPAIRED DURA MATER
L. A. Opperman, D. He, M. Herbert, R. Barceló, M. E. Elsalanty, B. E. Weprin, D. G. Genecov
14H37 (3’)
S29.A.5 BMP-2-BASED REGENERATION OF LARGE-SCALE CALVARIAL DEFECTS FOLLOWING SEVERE SURGICAL SITE
INFECTION IN RABBITS
G. E. DeCesare, G. M. Cooper, D. M. Smith, J. J. Cray, E. L. Lensie, M. Bykowski, M. P. Mooney, J. E. Losee
14H40 (5’) DISCUSSION
14H45 (6’)
S29.A.6 CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS: CLINICAL INSIGHTS AND IDENTIFICATION OF POTENTIALLY NEW ASSOCIATED LOCI
D. N. McDonald-McGinn, S. Bartlett, L. Whitaker, A. Santani, C. Stolle, E. Zackai
14H51 (3’)
S29.A.7 THE ROLE OF ANK AND INORGANIC PYROPHOSPHATES IN BONE REMODELING AND OSTEOCLASTIC ACTIVITY:
CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BASIS OF CRANIOMETAPHYSEAL DYSPLASIA
H. Nah, S. Abdelmagid, A. Zajac, S. Imad, M. A. Radecki
14H55 (3’)
S29.A.8 FRONTORHINY, A DISTINCTIVE PRESENTATION OF FRONTONASAL DYSPLASIA CAUSED BY RECESSIVE MUTATIONS
IN THE ALX3 HOMEOBOX GENE
S. R. F. Twigg, S. L. Versnel, G. Nurnberg, M. M. Lees, M. Bhat, P. Hammond, R. C. M. Hennekam, J. M. Hoogeboom, J. A. Hurst, D. Johnson, A. A. Robinson, P. J. Scambler, D. Gerrelli, P. Nurnberg, I. M. J. Mathijssen, A. O. M. Wilkie
14H58 (5’) DISCUSSION
15H03 (6’)
S29.A.9 TISSUE TURNOVER IN THE XENOPUS LAEVIS SKULL DURING METAMORPHOSIS
B. J. Slater, K. J. Liu, N. Quarto, M. D. Kwan, M. T. Longaker
15H09 (3’)
S29.A.10 PROGENITOR CELL MOBILIZATION ENHANCES BONY HEALING VIA IMPROVED NEOVASCULARIZATION
AND OSTEOGENESIS
X. Wang, R. J. Allen Jr., J. Tutela, E. H. Davidson, P. D. Nguyen, A. M. Sailon, G. K. Paek, P. B. Saadeh, S. M. Warren
15H13 (3’)
S29.A.11 INFLUENCE OF PLATELET RICH PLASMA ON NICOTINE COMPROMISED DISTRACTION OSTEOGENESIS
L. Ma, L. W. Zheng, L. K. Cheung
15H16 (4’) DISCUSSION
15H20 - 15H50 Coffee break in Exhibition Hall (University Suite)
Posters viewing in Oriel Room
15H50 - 17H05 PLENARY ROOM
S29-B SCIENCE AND RESEARCH PART 2
Chairpersons: A. Wilkie (U.K.), M. Longaker (USA)
15H50 (3’)
S29.B.1 HUMAN ADIPOSE-DERIVED STROMAL CELLS ELABORATE AND RESPOND TO BONE MORPHOGENETIC PROTEIN-2 (BMP-2) DURING IN VITRO OSTEOGENIC DIFFERENTIATION
D. M. Gupta, N. J. Panetta, D. C. Wan, M. T. Longaker
15H54 (6’)
S29.B.2 TISSUE-HARVEST PROCEDURE HAS NO EFFECT ON ADIPOSEDERIVED STROMAL CELL-MEDIATED BONE TISSUE ENGINEERING IN VITRO
N. J. Panetta, D. M. Gupta, M. D. Kwan, D. C. Wan, G. W. Commons, M. T. Longaker
16H00 (3’)
S29.B.3 RAPID AND EFFICIENT FEEDER-FREE GENERATION OF HUMAN ADIPOSE STROMAL CELL-DERIVED INDUCED
PLURIPOTENT STEM CELLS (HASC-IPSCS)
N. J. Panetta, D. M. Gupta, N. Sun, K. D. Wilson, A. Lee, F. J. Jia, R. C. Robbins, M. T. Longaker, J. C. Wu
16H04 (5’) DISCUSSION
16H09 (6’)
S29.B.4 IRF6 AS A DOWNSTREAM EFFECTOR OF TGFBETA3 SIGNALING IN PALATOGENESIS: IN UTERO SOMATIC DELIVERY
OF AD-IRF6 RESCUES THE PALATAL FUSION DEFECT IN TGFBETA3-/- MICE
C. Wu, G. Lakin, B. H. Yang, I. Salhab, R. E. Kirschner, H. D. Nah
16H16 (6’)
S29.B.5 CHEMICAL RESCUE OF CLEFT PALATE AND MIDLINE DEFECTS IN CONDITIONAL GSK-3BETA MICE
K. J. Liu, J. R. Arron, K. Stankunas, G. R. Crabtree, M. T. Longaker
16H23 (3’)
S29.B.6 ALTERNATIVES OF ALVEOPLASTY: PERIODONTAL REGENERATION AFTER REPAIRED MAXILLA ALVEOLAR BONY DEFECT BY ENGINEERED AUTOLOGUS BONE MARROW MESENCHYMAL STEM CELLS
H. Chao, T. Lin, H. Chung, S. Chang
16H27 (3’)
S29.B.7 EFFECTS OF CRITICAL PALATAL BONE DEFECT ON CRANIOFACIAL GROWTH IN A RAT MODEL
B. Bahuleyan, K. Chadipiralla, A. Gallego, E. Jolley, J. Godel, C. Huang, F. Garcia-Godoy, E. J. Stelnicki
16H30 (6’) DISCUSSION
16H36 (6’)
S29.B.8 DEVELOPMENT OF NEW SYNTHETIC BONE BY USING OF ELECTRON BEAM IRRADIATION ON THE HYDROXYAPATITE
AND TRICALCIUM PHOSPHATE MIXTURES
S. M. Kim, J. M. Park, M. Y. Eo, J. H. Lee
16H43 (3’)
S29.B.9 COMPOSITE TISSUE ENGINEERING SOLUTIONS FOR CRANIOFACIAL DEFECTS
E. H. Davidson, A. C. Allori, D. D. Reformat, E. A. Clark, J. L. Ricci, S. M. Warren
16H47 (3’)
S29.B.10 COMBINATION OF GUIDED OSTEOGENESIS WITH INJECTABLE AUTOLOGOUS PLATELET-RICH FIBRIN GLUE (PRFG)
AND MESENCHYMAL STEM CELL FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF MANDIBULAR DEFECTS
H. T. Liao, C. H. Chen, C. T. Chen
16H51 (3’)
S29.B.11 REGIONAL DIFFERENCES IN NEURAL CREST AND PARAXIAL MESODERM-DERIVED CALVARIAL BONE HEALING
EXIST, PERSIST WITH AGE, AND ARE ASSOCIATED WITH DIFFERENTIALLY ACTIVATED WNT SIGNALING
N. J. Panetta, D. M. Gupta, N. Quarto, B. Behr, M. D. Kwan, M. T. Longaker
16H55 (3’)
S29.B.12 LARGE SCALE MEMBRANOUS BONE REPAIR ENGINEERED BY TRICALCIUM PHOSPHATE
AND GELATIN-SANDWICHED SCAFFOLD AND BONE MARROW MESENCHYMAL STEM CELLS
H. Chung, F. Lin, T. Lin, S. Chang
16H58 (7’) DISCUSSION
19H30 – 21H00
OXFORD UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
CONGRESS RECEPTION