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Rapid prototyped porous nickel-titanium scaffolds as bone substitutes. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Calcium phosphate-based ceramics are common in bone repair but lack tensile strength, while bulk titanium is an established implant material that doesn’t match bone mechanics, leading to fixation issues.
  • Nickel-titanium alloys offer unique mechanical properties, including low elasticity and pseudoelasticity, making them better suited for mimicking bone characteristics.
  • Research showed that human mesenchymal stromal cells proliferated and differentiated similarly on selective laser melted nickel-titanium scaffolds as on traditional titanium, suggesting nickel-titanium could be a superior bone substitute.

Article Abstract

While calcium phosphate-based ceramics are currently the most widely used materials in bone repair, they generally lack tensile strength for initial load bearing. Bulk titanium is the gold standard of metallic implant materials, but does not match the mechanical properties of the surrounding bone, potentially leading to problems of fixation and bone resorption. As an alternative, nickel-titanium alloys possess a unique combination of mechanical properties including a relatively low elastic modulus, pseudoelasticity, and high damping capacity, matching the properties of bone better than any other metallic material. With the ultimate goal of fabricating porous implants for spinal, orthopedic and dental applications, nickel-titanium substrates were fabricated by means of selective laser melting. The response of human mesenchymal stromal cells to the nickel-titanium substrates was compared to mesenchymal stromal cells cultured on clinically used titanium. Selective laser melted titanium as well as surface-treated nickel-titanium and titanium served as controls. Mesenchymal stromal cells had similar proliferation rates when cultured on selective laser melted nickel-titanium, clinically used titanium, or controls. Osteogenic differentiation was similar for mesenchymal stromal cells cultured on the selected materials, as indicated by similar gene expression levels of bone sialoprotein and osteocalcin. Mesenchymal stromal cells seeded and cultured on porous three-dimensional selective laser melted nickel-titanium scaffolds homogeneously colonized the scaffold, and following osteogenic induction, filled the scaffold's pore volume with extracellular matrix. The combination of bone-related mechanical properties of selective laser melted nickel-titanium with its cytocompatibility and support of osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stromal cells highlights its potential as a superior bone substitute as compared to clinically used titanium.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4221926PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2041731414540674DOI Listing

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