Abstract
A correlation among the oriented growth of octacalcium phosphate (OCP), the arrangement of the collagen fibrils in a collagenous matrix and direction of ionic flow was studied in vitro at pH7.0 and at 37°, using two types of collagen disks made from sliced bovine Achilles tendon. Disk A and disk B were made from slices cut perpendicular and parallel to the collagen fibrils, respectively. The products on the collagen fibrils were a mixture of OCP and apatite in the both disks, but the relative amounts of apatite and OCP could not be determined. Short plate-like or flake-like OCP crystals grew parallel to the collagen fibrils and ionic flow on the Ca-side of the disk A. On the contrary, ribbon-like or rectangular OCP crystals grew along the collagen fibrils lying on the disk B. Apatite also grew with the same orientation as OCP in the both cases. The oriented and lengthwise growth of OCP crystals on the disk B was ascribed to the arrangement of the collagen fibrils in the disk.