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Bone-Growing
Nanomaterial Could Improve Orthopaedic Implants
Monday, September 17, 2007
Possibly
A Terrific New Material
A
titanium surface covereed by carbon nanotubes could lead to
faster, better growth of implanted bone-growing cells and an
improved success rate for orthopaedic surgery. The carbon
nanotubes could could even self-report, keeping doctors
informed about the healing process.
Credit:
Sirinrath Sirivisoot/Brown University
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For orthopaedic implants to
be successful, bone must meld to the metal that these artificial
hips, knees and shoulders are made of. A team of Brown University
engineers, led by Thomas Webster, has discovered a new material
that could significantly increase this success rate.
The secret: carbon nanotubes on
anodized titanium. The team took titanium – the most
popular implant material around – and chemically treated it
and applied an electrical current to it. This process, called
anodization, creates a pitted coating in the surface of the
titanium. Webster and his team packed those pits with a cobalt
catalyst and then ran the samples through a chemical process that
involved heating them to a scorching 700° C. That caused
carbon nanotubes to sprout from each pit.
Researchers then placed human
osteoblasts, or bone-forming cells, onto the nanotube-covered
samples as well as onto samples of plain and anodized titanium.
The samples were placed in an incubator. After three weeks, the
team found that the bone cells grew twice as fast on the titanium
covered in nanotubes. Cells interacting with the nanotubes also
made significantly more calcium – the essential ingredient
for healthy bones.
“What we found is
possibly a terrific new material for joint replacement and other
implants,” said Webster, associate professor of engineering
at Brown. “Right now, bone doesn’t always properly
meld to implants. Osteoblasts don’t grow or grow fast
enough. Adding carbon nanotubes to anodized titanium appears to
encourage that cell growth and function.”
Webster’s long-term
vision for the new material is ambitious. With it, Webster hopes
to create a new class of implants – ones that can sense
bone growth then send that information to an external device.
Doctors could monitor the output and determine whether to inject
growth hormones or otherwise intervene to avoid additional
surgery. Right now, implant patients must get an X-ray or undergo
a bone scan to monitor bone growth.
Webster thinks these
“biosensing” implants could even be designed to
detect infection and be specially coated to release antibiotics
or other drugs into the body.
Webster said the biosensing
concept would work because when cells make calcium, an electrical
current is created. That current can be conducted through carbon
nanotubes and transmitted via radio frequency to a handheld
device outside the body – a similar process to the one
employed by state-of-the-art cardiac pacemakers.
“This technology would be
incredibly exciting,” Webster said. “It could
significantly improve patient health – and cut down on
expensive diagnostic tests and surgery. We still have a long way
to go to make an intelligent implant a reality, but our new
results are a strong first step.”
Webster’s Brown research
team included engineering graduate student Sirinrath Sirivisoot,
the lead author of the Nanotechnology article, engineering
graduate students Chang Yao and Xingcheng Xiao and professor of
engineering Brian Sheldon.
The Coulter Foundation funded
the research.
Source:
Brown University

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