| Literature DB >> 23639194 |
Jae Hyup Lee1, Kug Sun Hong, Hae-Ri Baek, Jun-Hyuk Seo, Kyung Mee Lee, Hyun-Seung Ryu, Hyun-Kyung Lee.
Abstract
Surface coating using ceramics improves the bone bonding strength of an implant. We questioned whether a new type of glass-ceramics (BGS-7) coating (CaO-SiO2 -P2 O5 -B2 O3 ) would improve the osseointegration of Steinman pins (S-pins) both biomechanically and histomorphometrically. An in vivo study was performed using rabbits by inserting three S-pins into each iliac bone. The pins were 2.2-mm S-pins with a coating of 30-μm-thick BGS-7 and 550-nm-thick hydroxyapatite (HA), as opposed to an S-pin without coating. A tensile strength test and histomorphometrical evaluation was performed. In the 2-week group, the BGS-7 implant showed a significantly higher tensile strength than the S-pin. In the 4- and 8-week groups, the BGS-7 implants had significantly higher tensile strengths than the S-pins and HA implants. The histomorphometrical study revealed that the BGS-7 implant had a significantly higher contact ratio than the S-pin and HA implants in the 4-week group. The biomechanical and histomorphometrical tests showed that the BGS-7 coating had superior bone bonding properties than the groups without the coating from the initial stage of insertion. The BGS-7 coating of an S-pin will enhance the bone bonding strength, and there might also be an advantage in human bone bonding.Entities:
Keywords: CaO-SiO2-P2O5-B2O3 glass ceramics; In vivo study; Osseointegration; Osteoconductivity
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23639194 DOI: 10.1111/aor.12040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Artif Organs ISSN: 0160-564X Impact factor: 3.094