4.8 Article

Nanotextured titanium surfaces for enhancing skin growth on transcutaneous osseointegrated devices

Journal

ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 2352-2362

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2009.12.016

Keywords

Xeratinocyte; Titanium; Nanotopography; Adhesion; Proliferation

Funding

  1. VA Pre-Doctoral Associated Health Rehabilitation
  2. Department of Veterans Affairs, RR D [A3772C]

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A major problem with transcutaneous osseointegrated implants is infection, mainly due to improper closure of the implant-skin interface. Therefore, the design of transcutaneous osseointegrated devices that better promote skin growth around these exit sites needs to be examined and, if successful, would clearly limit infection. Due to the success already demonstrated for orthopedic implants, developing surfaces with biologically inspired nanometer features is a design criterion that needs to be investigated for transcutaneous devices. This study therefore examined the influence of nanotextured titanium (Ti) created through electron beam evaporation and anodization on keratinocyte (skin-forming cell) function. Electron beam evaporation created Ti surfaces with nanometer features while anodization created Ti surfaces with nanotubes. Conventional Ti surfaces were largely micron rough, with few nanometer surface features. Results revealed increased keratinocyte adhesion in addition to increased keratinocyte spreading and differences in keratinocyte filopodia extension on the nanotextured Ti surfaces prepared by either electron beam evaporation or anodization compared to their conventional, unmodified counterparts after 4 h. Results further revealed increased keratinocyte proliferation and cell spreading over 3 and 5 days only on the nanorough Ti surfaces prepared by electron beam evaporation compared to both the anodized nanotubular and unmodified Ti surfaces. Therefore, the results from this in vitro study provided the first evidence that nano-modification techniques should be further researched as a means to possibly improve skin growth, thereby improving transcutaneous osseointegrated orthopedic implant longevity. (C) 2009 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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