Many techniques are used to assess biomaterials implants, always intending to measure osseointegration success and tissue response facing the implanted material. Calcium phosphates are widely used as biomaterial and a major component of bone. Many processing methods have been used to achieve porous materials to allow bone ingrowth with an osteoconductive scaffold for bone. To obtain the macroporous BCP implant it was processed by direct consolidation using the protein-action technique, a globular protein based consolidation with ovalbumin. The samples were sintered at 1250°C for 30 minutes, after sintering samples were cut in 4mm diameter cylinders, with 73% volume of porosity and mean pore size ranging about 100 µm. In the present work the macroporous BCP of HAp:β-TCP is assessed after bone implantation in rabbits tibia by lectinhistochemistry (LHC) technique. Lectins are proteins from non-imune origin which binds with strong specificity carbohydrates, LHC is a technique which mark histologically carbohydrates present in glycoproteins of cells. The macroporous BCP cylindrical samples were implanted in male rabbits tibia to the evaluation of biocompatibility and osseointegration in a period of 2 weeks to 4 weeks. After euthanasia of rabbits, tibia samples from the surgery site were taken and fixed with formalin, decalcified, dehydrated and embedded with paraffin to perform histological slides for both morphological and molecular evaluation. The morphological evaluation were performed on histological slides stained with Haematoxilin and Eosin (HE), while for molecular evaluation LHC was performed on histological slides using the lectins PNA, UEA-1, WGA, sWGA and RCA-1 (Vector Labs). All samples osseointegrated well with the bone and the neoformed bone surrounding the implant took the shape of its surface. The implants also allowed bone ingrowth inside the pores towards the center of implant, characterized by islets of round bone present in the HE stained slides.
Studies of titanium and its alloys commonly used as biomaterials aim to improve bone-implant interface related problems, which may determine the quality, bone repairing time and therefore the implant clinical success. The goal of this study was to evaluate, in rats, osseointegration of macroporous implants produced by powder metallurgy (PM) method with controlled addition of gelatin. As control group, samples of commercially pure titanium (cpTi) and Ti-13Nb-13Zr alloy obtained by the PM process were used. To obtaining the porous samples, at most 15% in weight of gelatin was added to metallic powders, the samples were thermally treated in vacuum furnace, and sintered at 1150°C. The osseointegration evaluation was performed in Wistar rats, males, for a 28 days period. The morphological analyses, optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), evaluated qualitatively the osseointegration. The PM process modified by addition of gelatin provides with success the obtaining of porous metallic implants. Pore size obtained by this technique allowed the necessary nourishing to cell survival, proving that pores and channels form a high interconnectable network represented by the osseointegration and osteoconduction feature of the porous alloy.
Titanium and its alloys are the main metals studied as porous metallic implants by their excellent mechanical properties and biological interactions. Production methods of porous metallic materials are based on powder metallurgy (PM), because it allows the manufacturing of parts with complex shapes and dimensions close to the finals (near-net shape), and the addition of alloying elements reaching a satisfactory structural homogeneity, and porosity. The pore production by space-holder technique constitutes of mixing organic compounds with metal powder, which when removed by thermal treatment prior structures are kept in place. The objective of this study is to obtain porous implants of commercially pure titanium (cpTi) and Ti-13Nb-13Zr alloy by PM with space-holder technique and albumin as an additive. For the processing of the samples were used hydride titanium powder (TiH2) to obtain cpTi samples, and metal powders of Ti, Nb and Zr in the stoichiometric proportions for obtaining the alloy samples. The samples were prepared by mixing the metallic powder to the albumin (30wt%) and filling a silicone model that was pressed isostatically (140 MPa). The thermal treatment was performed in an oxidizing atmosphere (350°C/1h) for the decomposition of organic material. The sintering was performed at a temperature of 1300°C (1h/cpTi, 3h/Alloy) in high vacuum furnace (10-5 mBar) to all samples. The calculated porosity showed a significant difference between the samples cpTi (40%) and alloy (60%). The samples surface characterization showed very rough with high specific surface area. Samples of cpTi presented formation of necks arising from sintering. In the alloy samples were observed homogenous microstructure with the presence of α and β phases composing the Widmanstätten structure. It is possible to conclude that the same amount albumin allowed the formation of pores in the microstructure of cpTi and alloy although in different proportions, without harming the sintering of both and allowing diffusion of the alloy elements.
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