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  2. Your Guide to Allograft vs. Autograft Transplants - Healthline

    www.healthline.com/health/skin/allograft-vs-autograft

    Autograft: An autograft is a tissue graft that is taken from one part of a person’s body and transplanted into another part of their body. Allograft: An allograft is a tissue graft that is taken...

  3. Allograft vs. autograft bone grafts: Which is better? - Medical...

    www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/allograft-vs-autograft

    What is an autograft? A bone autograft involves repairing bone with material from a persons own body. Surgeons can take tissue from a person’s cancellous (spongy) bone,...

  4. Allograft vs. Autograft - Hartford Hospital

    hartfordhospital.org/.../human-tissue-graft-information/allograft-vs-autograft

    Autograft. A patient's own tissue - an autograft - can often be used for a surgical reconstruction procedure. Autograft tissue is the safest and fastest-healing tissue that can be used. However, harvesting autograft tissue creates a second surgical site from which the patient must recover.

  5. Bone Grafting: What It Is, Types, Risks and Benefits - Cleveland...

    my.clevelandclinic.org/health/treatments/16796-

    A bone graft is a procedure to apply bone tissue or similar substances to damaged bones. There are many methods, including allograft, autograft and synthetic bone grafting. Your healthcare provider will select the option that’s right for you based on your health history and why you need a graft.

  6. Autograft: The Patient's Own Bone - Spine-health

    www.spine-health.com/treatment/spinal-fusion/autograft-patients-own-bone

    An autograft is a portion of bone transplanted from one part of a patient’s body to another.

  7. Autograft vs Allograft: Key Differences Explained - GPOA

    www.gpoa.com/blog/autograft-vs-allograft-what-s-the-difference

    Autografts eliminate immune rejection risk, using the patient's own tissue, ensuring genetic compatibility and immune system acceptance. In contrast, allografts from different donors can trigger immune reactions and rejection.

  8. Autotransplantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autotransplantation

    The autologous tissue (also called autogenous, autogeneic, or autogenic tissue) transplanted by such a procedure is called an autograft or autotransplant. [2]

  9. Autograft or Allograft? - American Academy of Orthopaedic...

    www.aaos.org/aaosnow/2019/oct/clinical/clinical01

    The preferred technique is to use autograft when lesion size is appropriate and allograft for addressing medium to large defects and revision situations. Alignment, ligamentous instability, and meniscal deficiency are typically addressed concomitantly to maximize graft survivorship.

  10. Autograft - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/autograft

    Autograft is defined as the patients own bone and is usually harvested from the iliac crest. Its tricortical surface provides structural support when used as posterior lumbar interbody grafts until bony fusion occurs.

  11. Autograft | Allograft Academy

    allograftacademy.org/learn-about-allografts/bone-grafts/autograft

    Autograft bone, derived locally or from a second surgery site on the patient, provides a scaffold, signaling proteins, and viable cells. 1 The osteoinductivity of autograft is limited to those areas of bone which were undergoing routine remodeling. Local autograft originates from the surgical site.