Resorbable bioceramics based on stabilized calcium phosphates. Part I: rational design, sample preparation and material characterization

It has long been the goal of biomaterials research in the field of orthopedics to develop synthetic structures exhibiting comprehensive bioactivity. In particular, an ideal bone-biomaterial would support the activity of osteoblasts in the development of new bone, while simultaneously being resorbed...

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Published inBiomaterials Vol. 20; no. 18; pp. 1727 - 1741
Main Authors Langstaff, S., Sayer, M., Smith, T.J.N., Pugh, S.M., Hesp, S.A.M., Thompson, W.T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01.09.1999
Elsevier Science
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Summary:It has long been the goal of biomaterials research in the field of orthopedics to develop synthetic structures exhibiting comprehensive bioactivity. In particular, an ideal bone-biomaterial would support the activity of osteoblasts in the development of new bone, while simultaneously being resorbed by osteoclasts as part of the lifelong orderly process of bone remodelling. Such resorbable calcium phosphate-based thin films and bulk ceramics have now been created by the high-temperature processing of a fine precipitate, formed from a colloidal sol and stabilized using an additive such as silicon. The materials have two characteristic features: a phase composition which is a mixture of calcium hydroxyapatite and a silicon stabilized tricalcium phosphate, and a microporous morphology based on inter-connected particles (0.2–1 μm in diameter). X-ray diffraction, infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and light scattering experiments indicate that the characteristic phase composition arises during sintering through substitution reactions where silicon enters the calcium phosphate lattice under conditions of high chemical reactivity. The crystallographic features are linked through the glaserite form of the apatite structure.
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ISSN:0142-9612
1878-5905
DOI:10.1016/S0142-9612(99)00086-1