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Fiber-enriched double-setting calcium phosphate bone cement

✍ Scribed by Luís Alberto dos Santos; Raúl Garcia Carrodéguas; Anselmo Ortega Boschi; Antônio Celso Fonseca de Arruda


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
171 KB
Volume
65A
Category
Article
ISSN
1549-3296

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Calcium phosphate bone cements are useful in orthopedics and traumatology, their main advantages being their biocompatibility and bioactivity, which render bone tissue osteoconductive, providing in situ hardening and easy handling. However, their low mechanical strength, which, in the best of cases, is equal to the trabecular bone, and their very low toughness are disadvantages. Calcium phosphate cement compositions with mechanical properties more closely resembling those of human bone would broaden the range of applications, which is currently limited to sites subjected to low loads. This study investigated the influence of added polypropylene, nylon, and carbon fibers on the mechanical properties of double setting α‐tricalcium phosphate‐based cement, using calcium phosphate cement added to an in situ polymerizable acrylamide‐based system recently developed by the authors. Although the addition of fibers was found to reduce the compression strength of the double‐setting calcium phosphate cement because of increased porosity, it strongly increased the cement's toughness (J~IC~) and tensile strength. The composites developed in this work, therefore, have a potential application in shapes subjected to flexure. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 65A: 244–250, 2003


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