Biological and Medical Significance of Calcium Phosphates
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Abstract
The inorganic part of hard tissues (bones and teeth) of mammals consists of calcium phosphate, mainly of apatitic structure. Similarly, most undesired calcifications (i.e. those appearing as a result of various diseases) of mammals also contain calcium phosphate. For example, atherosclerosis results in blood-vessel blockage caused by a solid composite of cholesterol with calcium phosphate. Dental caries result in a replacement of less soluble and hard apatite by more soluble and softer calcium hydrogenphosphates. Osteoporosis is a demineralization of bone. Therefore, from a chemical point of view, processes of normal (bone and teeth formation and growth) and pathological (atherosclerosis and dental calculus)…
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2,000
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2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Calcium
- Apatite
- Osteoporosis
- Chemistry
- Phosphate
- Amorphous calcium phosphate
- Dentistry
- Biochemistry
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