scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on the thermal spraying of apatite bioceramics

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, a tensile strength measurement on the strength of the coating-substrate interface using various adhesives revealed a significant difference between epoxy resin and methacrylate.
Abstract
Hydroxylapatite (HA) coatings on metal substrates have been investigated for many years. These coatings have proved to be compatible with bone. The degree of crystallinity of HA changed, and sometimes dissociation was observed with respect to the plasma spray process. However, the plasma spray process hardly altered the crystallographic structure, with only line broadening visible. Thein vitro solubility is dependent on the degree of crystallinity of the coating. Tensile strength measurements on the strength of the coating-substrate interface using various adhesives revealed a significant difference between epoxy resin and methacrylate. The failure mode of this tensile test was dependent on the coating thickness and surface texture (polished versus nonpolished). In animal studies, the fixation of hydroxylapatite plasma- spray coated cylinders as well as noncoated Ti- 6A1- 4V cylinders (Ti) in cortical bone was evaluated using pushout tests. It appeared that HA- coated implants showed higher push- out strengths in the first months than the titanium implants, because of the earlier bone formation against the HA coating.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A review on calcium phosphate coatings produced using a sputtering process--an alternative to plasma spraying.

TL;DR: This review will discuss the characterization of sputtered CaP coatings before and after post-deposition treatments and tissue responses to some of the characterized coating surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Significance of calcium phosphate coatings for the enhancement of new bone osteogenesis – A review ☆

TL;DR: A systematic analysis of results available from in vitro, in vivo and clinical trials on the effects of biocompatible calcium phosphate (CaP) coatings is presented and the future research and use of these devices is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium phosphate-based coatings on titanium and its alloys

TL;DR: This review covers briefly the requirements of typical biomaterials and narrowly focuses on the works on titanium, where calcium phosphate ceramics for use in implants are introduced and various methods of producing calcium phosphate coating on titanium substrates are elaborated.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of plasma-assisted methods for calcium phosphate-based coatings fabrication

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the latest achievements in the field of plasma-assisted fabrication of biocompatible CaP-based coatings for medical implants with the emphasis on the coatings composition, structure, mechanical and biological performance is presented.
Book

Thin Calcium Phosphate Coatings for Medical Implants

TL;DR: A special class of biomaterials is composed of metallic devices with coatings to improve bone bonding and specialized coatings used to improve the metallic implant are the topic of this paper.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma sprayed coatings of hydroxylapatite

TL;DR: The technique of plasma spraying has been applied to deposit a thin, dense layer of hydroxylapatite onto a titanium substrate, and animal studies showed similar histological reactions to apatite coatings as to (well documented) Apatite bulk materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma-sprayed coatings of tetracalciumphosphate, hydroxyl-apatite, and alpha-TCP on titanium alloy: an interface study

TL;DR: Histological examinations revealed that hydroxylapatite and tetracalciumphosphate give rise to an excellent bone formation, while alpha-TCP and blanco titanium evoked remodeling and less bone contact.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical implant fixation using hydroxyl-apatite coatings. The development of a human total hip prosthesis for chemical fixation to bone using hydroxyl-apatite coatings on titanium substrates.

TL;DR: Hydroxyl-apatite coatings permit an implant fixation far superior to current methods using either cemented or cementless techniques, and the plan is to study a human total hip prosthesis with hydroxyl and apatite coating for chemical fixation to bone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of the solubility of different calcium phosphate ceramic particles in vitro.

TL;DR: In vitro solubility tests of hydroxyapatite, tetracalcium phosphate or tricalcium phosphate particles were performed in lactate, citrate, Gomoris or Michaelis buffer with pH 6.2 or 7.2 and in aqua destillata and the results showed that in general thesolubility decreased, except for lactate or citrate buffer, which had a rather stable pH value.
Related Papers (5)