3.8 Article

Relating nickel-induced tissue inflammation to nickel release in vivo

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 537-544

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS INC
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.1052

Keywords

laser ablation; tissue, metal ions; toxicity; implants

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Nickel has a number of adverse biological effects that have made the use of nickel in biomedical implants controversial. Yet information about the distribution of nickel in tissues around nickel-containing implants is scarce. The purpose of the current study was to use a laser ablation technique, combined with inductively coupled mass spectroscopy, to assess the spatial distribution of nickel around nickel-containing implants in vivo. Polyethylene, pure nickel wire, or a nickel-containing alloy (Ni-Cr) were implanted subcutaneously into rats for 7 days. The tissues were analyzed for Ni content and inflammation at 1-mm intervals up to 5 min away from the implants. The sham surgery sites and the polyethylene caused mild to moderate inflammation 1-2 mm from the implant site with no detectable nickel in the tissue. The nickel wire caused severe inflammation up to 5 mm away from the implant site with necrosis for I nun around the implant. Nickel concentrations reached 48 mug/g near the implants, falling exponentially to undetectable levels at 3-4 nun from the implants. The Ni-Cr wire caused inflammation equivalent to polyethylene, with less than 4 mug/g of nickel present in the tissue for 1-2 nun around the implants. The current study showed that the laser-ablation technique was well suited for the analysis of soft tissues for metal-ion content, and that the nickel distribution in tissues correlated well with overt tissue inflammation. (C) 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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