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Macroporous coating of silver-doped hydroxyapatite/silica nanocomposite on dental implants by EDTA intermediate to improve osteogenesis, antibacterial, and corrosion behavior. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Coating titanium implants with a modified hydroxyapatite nanocomposite enhances bioactivity and biocompatibility, addressing issues like infections and corrosion.
  • This new nanocomposite utilizes a silica-EDTA network to provide sustained release of silver nanoparticles and silicate ions, improving adhesion and uniformity on the implant surface.
  • Experiments show that this coating promotes better stem cell attachment and proliferation, inhibits bacterial growth, and offers greater corrosion resistance compared to traditional hydroxyapatite coatings.

Article Abstract

Coating a titanium (Ti) implant with hydroxyapatite (HA) increases its bioactivity and biocompatibility. However, implant-related infections and biological corrosion have restricted the success of implant. To address these issues, a modified hydroxyapatite nanocomposite (HA/silica-EDTA-AgNPs nanocomposite) was proposed to take advantage of the sustained release of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) and silicate ions through the silica-EDTA chelating network. As a result, a uniform layer of nanocomposite, compared to HA as the gold standard, was formed on Ti implants without fracture and with a high level of adhesion, using Plasma Electrolytic Oxidation (PEO). Bioactivity assessment evidenced a shift in the surface phase of the Ti implant to generation of beta-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP), a more bioresorbable material than HA. Metabolic activity assessments using human dental pulp stem cells revealed that Ti surfaces modified by the new nanocomposite are superior to bare and HA-modified Ti surfaces for cell attachment and proliferation in vitro. In addition, it successfully inhibited bacterial growth and induced osteogenesis on the implant surface. Finally, potentiodynamic polarization behavior of Ti implants before and after coating confirmed that a thick oxide interface layer on the modified Ti surface acts as an electrical barrier and protects the substrate layer from corrosion. Therefore, the HA/silica-EDTA/Ag nanocomposite presented here, compared to HA, can better coat Ti dental implants due to its good biocompatibility and osteoinductive activity, along with improved biological stability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-605X/ad971dDOI Listing

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