
doi: 10.1155/2014/209548
pmid: 24563860
pmc: PMC3915853
handle: 20.500.12395/30561 , 20.500.12418/8441
doi: 10.1155/2014/209548
pmid: 24563860
pmc: PMC3915853
handle: 20.500.12395/30561 , 20.500.12418/8441
We developed a new product called titanium-prepared platelet-rich fibrin (T-PRF). The T-PRF method is based on the hypothesis that titanium may be more effective in activating platelets than the silica activators used with glass tubes in Chouckroun’s leukocyte- and platelet-rich fibrin (L-PRF) method. In this study, we aimed to define the structural characteristics of T-PRF and compare it with L-PRF. Blood samples were collected from 10 healthy male volunteers. The blood samples were drawn using a syringe. Nine milliliters was transferred to a dry glass tube, and 9 mL was transferred to a titanium tube. Half of each clot (i.e., the blood that was clotted using T-PRF or L-PRF) was processed with a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The other half of each clot was processed for fluorescence microscopy analysis and light microscopy analysis. The T-PRF samples seemed to have a highly organized network with continuous integrity compared to the other L-PRF samples. Histomorphometric analysis showed that T-PRF fibrin network covers larger area than L-PRF fibrin network; also fibrin seemed thicker in the T-PRF samples. This is the first human study to define T-PRF as an autogenous leukocyte- and platelet-rich fibrin product. The platelet activation by titanium seems to offer some high characteristics to T-PRF.
Adult, Blood Platelets, Male, Titanium, Fibrin, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, 630, Young Adult, Humans, Blood Coagulation, Research Article
Adult, Blood Platelets, Male, Titanium, Fibrin, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, 630, Young Adult, Humans, Blood Coagulation, Research Article
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