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Softening bioactive glass for bone regeneration: sol-gel hybrid materials

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 5083-5095

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c0sm01348j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Canadian Centennial Scholarship Fund UK
  3. Department of Materials, Imperial College London
  4. EPSRC [EP/E057098/1]
  5. Philip Leverhulme
  6. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/E057098/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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There is a clinical need for materials that can stimulate repair of bone by kindling the body's own healing mechanisms. Bone can heal itself if the defect is small, but needs assistance if the defect is over a critical size. It is widely accepted that a temporary template ( scaffold) is needed that can act as a guide and stimulus for vascularised bone growth. However, no material exists which fulfils all of the criteria for a bone regeneration scaffold. Although ceramics and glasses have been developed that have excellent biological properties, including pore structures that mimic porous bone, tailored degradation rates, the ability to bond to bone and stimulate new bone growth ( bioactive), they are inherently brittle materials and cannot be used in applications that experience cyclic loads. These current bioactive materials must be softened to introduce toughness and plasticity. The obvious way to improve toughness is to make a composite material, using a bioactive ceramic or glass as the inorganic phase within a biodegradable polymer as the organic matrix. Unfortunately, the bioactive particles or fibres are initially covered and are only exposed as the polymer degrades, since the particles degrade at a slower rate. Cells will preferentially attach to these exposed bioactive particles, but further degradation of the polymer can cause inflammation as the particles are released. Commonly US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved polyesters degrade catastrophically by self-catalytic hydrolysis, causing the rapid loss of mechanical properties. The degradation can be made more congruent by careful polymer selection and manipulation or by developing specialised types of nanocomposites. This article focuses on the shift in emphasis from hard, brittle matter to durable, tough materials for bone scaffolds, specifically the development of a particular type of nanocomposite: inorganic/organic hybrids synthesised through the sol-gel process. Selected chemical and process challenges are described that must be overcome if they are to become a clinical success.

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