3.8 Article

Bioactive sol-gel foams for tissue repair

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH
Volume 59, Issue 2, Pages 340-348

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.1250

Keywords

foam; bioactivity; tissue engineering; bone grafts; porous ceramics

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Bioactive glasses are known to have the ability to regenerate bone, but their use has been restricted mainly to powder, granules, or small monoliths. This work reports on the development of sol-gel foams with potential applications as bone graft implants or as templates for the in vitro synthesis of bone tissue for transplantation. These bioactive foams exhibit a hierarchical structure with interconnected macropores (10-500 mum) and a mesoporous framework typical of gel-glasses (pores of 2-50 nm). The macroporous matrixes were produced through a novel route that comprises foaming of sol-gel systems. Three glass systems were tested to verify the applicability of this manufacturing route, namely SiO2, SiO2-CaO, and SiO2-CaO-P2O5. This now class of material combines large pores to support vascularization and 3-D tissue growth with the ability that bioactive materials have to provide bone-bonding and controlled release of ionic biologic stimuli to promote bone cell proliferation by gene activation. (C) 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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