4.8 Article

Time-dependent degradation of titanium osteoconductivity: An implication of biological aging of implant materials

期刊

BIOMATERIALS
卷 30, 期 29, 页码 5352-5363

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2009.06.040

关键词

Bone-titanium integration; Hydrocarbon; Osseointegration; Total hip replacement; Dental implant

资金

  1. Research Facilities Improvement Program [C06RR014529]
  2. National Center for Research Resources, National Institute of Health

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The shelf life of implantable materials has rarely been addressed. We determined whether osteo-conductivity of titanium is stable over time. Rat bone marrow-derived osteoblasts were cultured on new titanium disks (immediately after acid-etching), 3-day-old (stored after acid-etching for 3 days in dark ambient conditions), 2-week-old, and 4-week-old disks. Protein adsorption capacity, and osteoblast migration, attachment, spread, proliferation and mineralization decreased substantially on old titanium surfaces in an age-dependent manner. When the 4-week-old implants were placed into rat femurs, the biomechanical strength of bone-titanium integration was less than half that for newly processed implants at the early healing stage. More than 90% of the new implant surface was covered by newly generated bone compared to 58% for 4-week-old implants. This time-dependent biological degradation was also found for machined and sandblasted titanium surfaces and was associated with progressive accumulation of hydrocarbon on titanium surfaces. The new surface could attract osteoblasts even under a protein-free condition, but its high bioactivity was abrogated by masking the surface with anions. These results uncover an aging-like time-dependent biological degradation of titanium surfaces from bioactive to bioinert. We also suggest possible underlying mechanisms for this biological degradation that provide new insights into how we could inadvertently lose, and conversely, maximize the osteoconductivity of titanium-based implant materials. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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