Enhanced osteoconductivity on electrically charged titanium implants treated by physicochemical surface modifications methods

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Document typeArticle
Defense date2019-06-01
Rights accessOpen Access
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Abstract
Biomimetic design is a key tenet of orthopedic device technology, and in particular the development of responsive surfaces that promote ion exchange with interfacing tissues, facilitating the ionic events that occur naturally during bone repair, hold promise in orthopedic fixation strategies. Non-bioactive nanostructured titanium implants treated by shot-blasting and acid-etching (AE) induced higher bone implant contact (BIC=52% and 65%) compared to shot-blasted treated (SB) implants (BIC=46% and 47%) at weeks 4 and 8, respectively. However, bioactive charged implants produced by plasma (PL) or thermochemical (BIO) processes exhibited enhanced osteoconductivity through specific ionic surface-tissue exchange (PL, BIC= 69% and 77% and BIO, BIC= 85% and 87% at weeks 4 and 8 respectively). Furthermore, bioactive surfaces (PL and BIO) showed functional mechanical stability (resonance frequency analyses) as early as 4 weeks post implantation via increased total bone area (BAT=56% and 59%) ingrowth compared to SB (BAT=35%) and AE (BAT=35%) surfaces.
CitationFernandez, M. [et al.]. Enhanced osteoconductivity on electrically charged titanium implants treated by physicochemical surface modifications methods. "Nanomedicine: nanotechnology, biology and medicine", 1 Juny 2019, vol. 18, p. 1-10.
ISSN1549-9634
Publisher versionhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S154996341930036X
Collections
- Departament de Ciència i Enginyeria de Materials - Articles de revista [913]
- CIEFMA - Centre d'Integritat Estructural, Fiabilitat i Micromecànica dels Materials - Articles de revista [283]
- CRnE - Centre de Recerca en Ciència i Enginyeria Multiescala de Barcelona - Articles de revista [6]
- BBT - Grup de recerca en Biomaterials, Biomecànica i Enginyeria de Teixits - Articles de revista [479]
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