TY - JOUR
T1 - Functionalized Cortical Bone-Inspired Composites Adapt to the Mechanical and Biological Properties of the Edentulous Area to Resist Fretting Wear
AU - Wang, ZhongYi
AU - Xiang, QianRong
AU - Tan, Xin
AU - Zhang, YaDong
AU - Zhu, HaoQi
AU - Pu, Jian
AU - Sun, JiKui
AU - Sun, ManLin
AU - Wang, YingKai
AU - Wei, Qiang
AU - Yu, HaiYang
PY - 2023/4/14
Y1 - 2023/4/14
N2 - Dental implants with long-term success of osseointegration have always been the goal, however, difficulties exist. The accumulation of fretting damage at the implant–bone interface often gets overlooked. Commonly used titanium is approximately 7-fold harder and stiffer than cortical bone. Stress shielding caused by the mismatching of the elastic modulus aggravates fretting at the interface, which is accompanied by the risk of the formation of proinflammatory metal debris and implant loosening. Thus, the authors explore functionalized cortical bone-inspired composites (FCBIC) with a hierarchical structure at multiple scales, that exhibit good mechanical and biological adaptivity with cortical bone. The design is inspired by nature, combining brittle minerals with organic molecules to maintain machinability, which helps to acquire excellent energy-dissipating capability. It therefore has the comparable hardness and elastic modulus, strength, and elastic-plastic deformation to cortical bone. Meanwhile, this cortical bone analogy exhibits excellent osteoinduction and osseointegration abilities. These two properties also facilitate each other to resist fretting wear, and therefore improve the success rate of implantation. Based on these results, the biological–mechanical co-operation coefficient is proposed to describe the coupling between these two factors for designing the optimized dental implants. © 2023 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
AB - Dental implants with long-term success of osseointegration have always been the goal, however, difficulties exist. The accumulation of fretting damage at the implant–bone interface often gets overlooked. Commonly used titanium is approximately 7-fold harder and stiffer than cortical bone. Stress shielding caused by the mismatching of the elastic modulus aggravates fretting at the interface, which is accompanied by the risk of the formation of proinflammatory metal debris and implant loosening. Thus, the authors explore functionalized cortical bone-inspired composites (FCBIC) with a hierarchical structure at multiple scales, that exhibit good mechanical and biological adaptivity with cortical bone. The design is inspired by nature, combining brittle minerals with organic molecules to maintain machinability, which helps to acquire excellent energy-dissipating capability. It therefore has the comparable hardness and elastic modulus, strength, and elastic-plastic deformation to cortical bone. Meanwhile, this cortical bone analogy exhibits excellent osteoinduction and osseointegration abilities. These two properties also facilitate each other to resist fretting wear, and therefore improve the success rate of implantation. Based on these results, the biological–mechanical co-operation coefficient is proposed to describe the coupling between these two factors for designing the optimized dental implants. © 2023 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
KW - biological–mechanical adaptivity
KW - dentition defects
KW - fretting wear
KW - implant–bone interface
KW - zirconia
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UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85148042876&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1002/advs.202207255
DO - 10.1002/advs.202207255
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
C2 - 36775879
SN - 2198-3844
VL - 10
JO - Advanced Science
JF - Advanced Science
IS - 11
M1 - 2207255
ER -