The aim of this study was to investigate the biological and mechanical response of bone to titanium plasmasprayed implants of different roughnesses. Three types of titanium plasma-spray coating were applied to beamshaped implants: Ti2, Ti3, and Ti4, with a Ra of 16.5, 21.4, and 37.9 m, respectively.
In vivo behavior and mechanical stability of surface-modified titanium implants by plasma spray coating and chemical treatments
✍ Scribed by Lee, Baek-Hee ;Kim, Jung Kyu ;Kim, Young Do ;Choi, Kuiwon ;Lee, Kyu Hwan
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 319 KB
- Volume
- 69A
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The geometric design and chemical compositions of an implant surface may have an important part in affecting early implant stabilization and influencing tissue healing. In this study, in vivo behavior and mechanical stability in implants of three surface designs, which were smooth surface (SS), rough titanium (Ti) surface by plasma spray coating (PSC), and alkali‐ and heat‐treated (AHT) Ti surface after plasma spray coating, were compared by histological and mechanical analyses. Surface morphologies of the implants were observed by optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Chemical compositional surface changes were investigated by energy dispersive spectroscopy. The implants were inserted transversely in a dog thighbone and evaluated at 4 weeks of healing. At 4 weeks of healing after implantation in bone, the healing tissue was more extensively integrated with an AHT implant than with the implants of smooth (SS) and/or rough Ti surfaces (PSC). The bone bonding strength (pull‐out force) between living bone and implant was observed by a universal testing machine. At 4 weeks' healing after implant placement in bone, the pull‐out forces of the SS, PSC, and AHT implants were 235 (±34.25), 710 (±142.25), and 823 (±152.22) N, respectively. Histological and mechanical data demonstrate that appropriate surface design selection can improve early bone growth and induce an acceleration of the healing response, thereby improving the potential for implant osseointegration. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 69A: 279–285, 2004
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of coating characteristics on the mechanical strengths of the plasma-sprayed HA-coated Ti-6Al-4V implant system both in vitro and in vivo. Two types of HA coatings (HACs) with quite different microstructures, concentrations of impurityphases, and indi
The integrity and thermal decomposition of calcium apatite are influenced by the underlying titanium during plasmaspraying deposition, especially at the apatiteititanium interface. The destruction of apatite at the interface is governed by substrate temperature, titanium catalysis, and its reaction
## Abstract This study evaluated the effects of the addition of oxide structure with submicron‐scale porous morphology on the periimplant bone response around titanium (Ti) implants with microroughened surfaces. Hydroxyapatite‐blasted Ti implants with (experimental) and without (control) a porous o