Two implant types of hydroxyapatite (HA) currently are available for dental implants: dense HA-cemented titanium (Ti) and HA-coated. It has been shown in previous reports that there are differences in the chemical and mechanical stabilities between the dense HA and HA coated. The differences are tho
Microstructural changes in bone of HA-coated implants
β Scribed by Ogiso, Makoto ;Yamashita, Yasuo ;Matsumoto, Toshio
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 854 KB
- Volume
- 39
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In our previous comparative push-out test of HA-coated implants and dense HA implants in dog bone, the ratio of the push-out value of the HA-coated implant to that of the dense HA implant decreased with time due to weakening of the HA coating as compared to the dense, more durable HA. The aim of this study was to investigate by histological examination of HA-coated implants in dog bone, using TEM, how this weakening of the HA coating occurs. The HA coating before implantation is composed of an amorphous glassy phase and a crystal phase scattered within the glassy phase. After implantation, the crystal phase remained almost unchanged. However, in the glassy phase, crystallization occurred and progressed with time. By 3 weeks after implantation, this crystallization already had started in the surface portion of the HA coating where it was covered by bone and also where it still touched the soft tissue. By 10 months, the crystallization had progressed to the deeper portion of the HA coating and had expanded to most of the glassy phase except for the narrow portions along the substrate-coating interface. These findings suggest that a progression of crystallization in the glassy phase causes stress accumulation within the HA coating, especially in the interface between the HA coating and the substrate, and that this stress accumulation results in a weakening of the HA-coated implant.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two types of hydroxyapatite (HA) implants have been developed: an HA-coated implant and a dense HA implant. For a longer in situ life span, the HA implant must remain chemically stable and possess high resistance to occlusal force. To determine which type of HA implant shows better durability, this
There are many controversies about the long-term prognosis of hydroxyapatite (HA)-coated implants. Failure may be related to compositional and structural changes of the coating occurring during implantation. Two retrieved and two unused HA-coated blade-type implants were examined by stereomicroscopy
Tensile strength testing of the interface between bone and a plasma-sprayed hydroxyapatite (HA) coating-Ti-6Al-4V (implant I) and an HA coating-Ti (implant II) was performed. The bone-implant interface and tensile failure mode were evaluated by light microscopy (LM), SEM-energy dispersive X-ray anal
## Abstract Hydroxyapatite (HAp) coatings are applied to orthopedic and dental implants made of titanium (Ti) and its alloys in order to increase their bioactivities and to offset the mechanical weakness of HAp. We examined the __in vivo__ effects of electrical polarization on the bone bonding of H
## Abstract Primary cementless joint replacement depends partly on the ability of bone to heal into those areas of an inserted implant where a gap to surrounding bone initially exists. A new bone preparation technique, compaction, has enhanced gapβhealing around gritβblasted implants without osteoc