Literature DB >> 2918011

Bonding behavior of a glass-ceramic containing apatite and wollastonite in segmental replacement of the rabbit tibia under load-bearing conditions.

T Kitsugi1, T Yamamuro, T Kokubo.   

Abstract

Glass-ceramic implants containing apatite and wollastonite were studied under load-bearing conditions in a segmental replacement model in the tibia of the rabbit. Alumina-ceramic implants were used as a control. A sixteen-millimeter segment of the middle of the shaft of the tibia was resected at a point distal to the junction of the tibia and the fibula. The defect was replaced by a fifteen-millimeter-long hollow, cylindrical implant that was fixed by intramedullary nailing using a Kirschner wire. Two groups of eight rabbits each (one group with a glass-ceramic implant and the other with an alumina implant) were killed twelve weeks after implantation. Two similar groups were killed twenty-five weeks after implantation. The segment of the tibia that contained the implant was excised and tension-tested. The load to failure of glass-ceramic implants containing apatite and wollastonite increased with time. The loads to failure of the glass-ceramic and alumina implants at twelve weeks after implantation were 19.8 +/- 7.06 and zero newtons, respectively. The loads to failure of glass-ceramic and alumina implants at twenty-five weeks after implantation were 126.4 +/- 32.54 and 19.6 +/- 13.92 newtons, respectively. No glass-ceramic implants broke. A calcium-phosphorus layer at the interface of the glass-ceramic and the bone was observed by scanning electron microscopy and electron-probe microanalysis. There was no interposition of soft tissue between the glass-ceramic and the bone, as observed by Giemsa surface staining.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2918011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


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4.  Influence of disodium (1-hydroxythylidene) diphosphonate on bonding between glass-ceramics containing apatite and wollastonite and mature male rabbit bone.

Authors:  T Kitsugi; T Yamamuro; T Nakamura; M Oka; T Kokubo
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5.  Kinetics and mechanisms of the conversion of silicate (45S5), borate, and borosilicate glasses to hydroxyapatite in dilute phosphate solutions.

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Review 6.  Biological Activation of Inert Ceramics: Recent Advances Using Tailored Self-Assembled Monolayers on Implant Ceramic Surfaces.

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7.  Good short-term outcome of primary total hip arthroplasty with cementless bioactive glass ceramic bottom-coated implants: 109 hips followed for 3–9 years.

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  7 in total

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