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Design, Manufacture, and Characterization of a Critical-Sized Gradient Porosity Dual-Material Tibial Defect Scaffold. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study introduces a tibia defect scaffold with a radial gradient porosity to improve stress distribution in bone repair.
  • Simulations showed that this scaffold design reduces stiffness and stress shielding effects, leading to better integration with the surrounding bone.
  • The scaffold is made using selective laser melting and optimized through stress relief annealing, ensuring effective strength and functionality in critical-sized bone defects.

Article Abstract

This study proposed a composite tibia defect scaffold with radial gradient porosity, utilizing finite element analysis to assess stress in the tibial region with significant critical-sized defects. Simulations for scaffolds with different porosities were conducted, designing an optimal tibia defect scaffold with radial gradient porosity for repairing and replacing critical bone defects. Radial gradient porosity scaffolds resulted in a more uniform stress distribution, reducing titanium alloy stiffness and alleviating stress shielding effects. The scaffold was manufactured using selective laser melting (SLM) technology with stress relief annealing to simplify porous structure fabrication. The study used New Zealand white rabbits' tibia defect sites as simulation parameters, reconstructing the 3D model and implanting the composite scaffold. Finite element analysis in ANSYS-Workbench simulated forces under high-activity conditions, analyzing stress distribution and strain. In the simulation, the titanium alloy scaffold bore a maximum stress of 122.8626 MPa, while the centrally encapsulated HAp material delivered 27.92 MPa. The design demonstrated superior structural strength, thereby reducing stress concentration. The scaffold was manufactured using SLM, and the uniform design method was used to determine a collection of optimum annealing parameters. Nanoindentation and compression tests were used to determine the influence of annealing on the elastic modulus, hardness, and strain energy of the scaffold.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11047886PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11040308DOI Listing

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