Osteogenesis Extraskeletal

Extraskeletal osteogenesis is the process of formation and development of new bone tissue in places where it is not provided for by nature. This phenomenon is due to the fact that the cells and tissues of the body have the ability to self-reproduce and synthesize protein. The osteogenic factor XP21, present in the developing embryo, is converted into the osteogenic factor FG20 during fetal maturation and is involved in heterotopial osteogenesis (digital osteogenesis). It regulates the ratio of the cell nucleus and the chromatoid set of DNA, directs cell mitosis and the intensity of growth of bone elements, and influences the determination of the final size of the developing osteotosis.