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CLASSIFICATION OF BIOMATERIALS

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Title: CLASSIFICATION OF BIOMATERIALS


1
CLASSIFICATION OF BIOMATERIALS

2
METALIC BIOMATERIALS
  • Crystal structures and strong metallic bonds -
    orthopedic applications
  • - the face and jaw surgery
  • - cardio-vascular surgery

material joint prosthesis and bone renewal
Dental implant
Artificial heart parts, heart valve
3
Metals used as Biomaterials
  • Steel
  • Cobalt-containing alloys
  • Titanium and titanium containing alloys
  • Dental amalgam (XHg)
  • Gold
  • Nickel- titanium alloys

4
  • Corrosion
  • The undesired chemical reaction of metals with
    their surruondings that forms oxygen, hydroxide
    and other compounds then degradation

Corroding Metal X Biocompatible
5
Ceramic Biomaterials (Bioceramics)
  • The class of ceramics used for repair and
    replacement of diseased and damaged parts of the
    musculoskeletal system are referred to as
    bioceramics.
  • OBJECTIVES
  • To examine chemical/physical properties of
    ceramics
  • To introduce the use of ceramics as biomaterials
  • To explore concepts and mechanisms of bioactivity

6
Ceramics
  • (keramikos- pottery in Greek)
  • Ceramics are refractory polycrystalline compounds
  • Usually inorganic
  • Highly inert
  • Hard and brittle
  • High compressive strength
  • Generally good electric and thermal insulators
  • Good aesthetic appearance
  • Applications
  • orthopaedic implants
  • dental applications
  • compromise of non-load bearing for bioactivity

7
BIOCERAMICS
  • Bioceramics
  • Repair the parts of body that injured or lost
    their function, restructuring or special
    ceramics are designed to replace
  • - polycrystalline structure ceramic
    (alumina),
  • - bioactive glass,
  • - bioactive glass-ceramics,
  • - bioactive composites

8
Using Areas of Bioceramics
  • Glasses,
  • Diagnostic devices,
  • Thermometers,
  • Tissue culture vessels.
  • Filling materials,
  • Gold-porcelain coating,
  • Prosthetic parts

Health Sector
Dental
9
Structure
  • Ceramic Structure AmXn

ZnS
A metal, ve
CsCl
NaCl
X nonmetal, -ve
10
Natures Ceramic Composites
  • Natural hard tissues are ceramic-polymer
    composites
  • Bones, Teeth, Shells
  • Tissue organic polymer fibers mineral
    living cells
  • Mineral component (Ceramic)
  • Bone hydroxyapatite (HA) Ca5(PO4)3OH
  • Mineralization under biological conditions
  • Many elemental substitutions
  • Protein directed crystallization
  • Unique characteristics crystal morphology and
    solubility
  • Synthetic calcium phosphates are used as
    biomaterials bioactive

Synthetic HA
Bone HA
11
Types of Ceramics
nearly bioinert
12
Bioactivity vs. Biocompatibility
  • Biocompatibility
  • Objective is to minimize inflammatory responses
    and toxic effects
  • Bioactivity - Evolving concept
  • The characteristic that allows the material to
    form a bond with living tissue (Hench, 1971)
  • The ability of a material to stimulate healing
    and trick the tissue system into responding as if
    it were a natural tissue (Hench 2002).
  • Advantages Bone tissue implant interface,
    enhanced healing response, extends implant life
  • Biodegradability
  • Breakdown of implant due to chemical or cellular
    actions
  • If timed to rate of tissue healing transforms
    implant to scaffold for tissue regeneration
  • Negates issues of stress shielding, implant
    loosening, long term stability

13
Classification based on tissue attachment
14
Mechanical Properties
15
  • BIOCERAMICS
  • Bioactive ceramic, that allows the chemical bond
    formation between tissue and implant
  • Bioinert ceramic, that doesnt allow the chemical
    bond formation between tissue and implant

BIOINERT BIOACTIVE
16
MATERIAL TISSUE
TOXIC DEAD
Bioinert NON-TOXIC Bioactive Soluble Various thicknesses of fibrous tissue binding of tissue-implant interface, Tissue replaces Implant place
17
Classification of Bioceramics According to Tissue
Responses
Implant Type Tissue response Example
Nonporous, dense and inert ceramics The formation of very fine fibrous tissue Alumina, Zirconia
Porous inert ceramics The tissue growth in pores Hydroxyapatite
Resorbable ceramics Absorption Tricalcium phosphate Bioactive glasses
Ceramic implants are non-toxic
18
Bioceramics According to Structural Functions
  • Oxide ceramics, inert structure, polycrystalline
    ceramics consisting of metal ions in the plane
    formed by the dissolution of oxygen ions
  • Alumina (Al2O3) orthopedic
    applications

  • Zirconia (ZrO2) femoral
    prosthese

19
Inert Ceramics Alumina
  • History
  • since early seventies more than 2.5 million
    femoral heads implanted worldwide.
  • alumina-on-alumina implants have been FDA
    monitored
  • over 3000 implants have been successfully
    implemented since 1987
  • Smaller the grain size and porosity, higher the
    strength
  • E 380 GPa (stress shielding may be a problem)
  • High hardness
  • Low friction
  • Low wear
  • Corrosion resistance
  • Friction surface finish of lt0.02 um
  • Wear no wear particles generated biocompatible

20
Inert Ceramics Aluminum Oxides (Alumina Al2O3)
  • Applications
  • orthopaedics
  • femoral head
  • bone screws and plates
  • porous coatings for femoral stems
  • porous spacers (specifically in revision surgery)
  • knee prosthesis
  • dental crowns and bridges

21
Alumina
  • Bioinertness
  • Results in biocompatibility low immune response
  • Disadvantage
  • Minimal bone ingrowth
  • Non-adherent fibrous membrane
  • Interfacial failure and loss of implant can occur

22
Inert Ceramics Zirconia, ZrO2
  • zirconium named from the Arabic, zargun gold
    color
  • Fabrication
  • Obtained from the mineral zircon
  • Addition of MgO, CaO, CeO, or Y2O3 stabilize
    tetragonal crystal structure (e.g. 97 molZrO2
    and 3 molY2O3)
  • Usually hot-pressed or hot isostatically pressed
  • Applications
  • orthopaedics femoral head, artificial knee, bone
    screws and plates, favored over UHMWPE due to
    superior wear resistance
  • dental crowns and bridges

23
  • Glass and glass-ceramics
  • Silica(SiO2) based ceramics (Includes
    Lithium-Aluminum or Magnesium-Aluminum crystals )
  • Bioglass
  • Instead of some silica groups, calcium,
    phosphorus or sodium is present (SiO2, Na2O, CaO,
    P2O5)

24
Bioactive Ceramics Glass Ceramics
  • Glass
  • an inorganic melt cooled to solid form without
    crystallization
  • an amorphous solid
  • Possesses short range atomic order ? Brittle!
  • Glass-ceramic is a polycrystalline solid prepared
    by controlled crystallization of glass
  • Glass ceramics were the first biomaterials to
    display bioactivity (bone system)
  • Capable of direct chemical bonding with the host
    tissue
  • Stimulatory effects on bone-building cells

25
Bioactive Ceramics Glass Ceramics
  • Composition includes SiO2, CaO and Na2O
  • Bioactivity depends on the relative amounts of
    SiO2, CaO and Na2O
  • Cannot be used for load bearing applications
  • Ideal as bone cement filler and coating due to
    its biological activity

26
Bioactive Ceramics Glass ceramics
A Bonding within 30 days B Nonbonding,
reactivity too low C Nonbonding, reactivity too
high D Bonding
27
Bioactive Ceramics Glass Ceramics
  • Bioactive capable of direct chemical bonding
    with the host biological tissue
  • Glass
  • an inorganic melt cooled to solid form without
    crystallization
  • an amorphous solid
  • possesses short range atomic order ? BRITTLE!
  • Glass-ceramic is a polycrystalline solid prepared
    by controlled crystallization of glass ? LESS
    BRITTLE

28
  • Calcium-phosphate ceramics their structure is
    the form of multiple oxides of calcium and
    phosphate atoms
  • Hydroxyapatite Ca5(PO4)3OH,
  • Tricalcium phosphate, Ca3(PO4)2
  • Oktacalcium phosphate CaH(PO4)3.2OH

In medicine and dentistry
29
Biodegradable Ceramics Calcium (Ortho) Phosphate
  • Structure resembles bone mineral thus used for
    bone replacement
  • Coating of metal implants to promote bone
    ingrowth
  • Different forms exist depending on Ca/P ratio,
    presence of water, impurities and temperature
  • 7 different forms of PO4 based calcium phosphates
    exist - depend on Ca/P ratio, presence of water,
    pH, impurities and temperature

30
Calcium Phosphate
  • Powders
  • Scaffolds
  • Coatings for implants metals, heart valves to
    inhibit clotting
  • Self-Setting bone cement

31
Calcium Phosphates
  • Uses
  • repair material for bone damaged trauma or
    disease
  • void filling after resection of bone tumors
  • repair and fusion of vertebrae
  • repair of herniated disks
  • repair of maxillofacial and dental defects
  • ocular implants
  • drug-delivery
  • coatings for metal implants, heart valves to
    inhibit clotting

32
Advantage of Bioceramics
  • The resistance to
  • Microorganisms,
  • Temparature,
  • Solvents
  • pH changes
  • High pressures is the advantage in health and
    dental aplications

33
Bioceramics are used repair or renewal of a hard
connective tissue in the skeleton
  • The elderly, the bones are very brittle
  • slow-moving cracks,
  • uncertainties to durability
  • in different strokes and pressures

The most important reasons for limiting the use
of bioceramics,
34
Interaction of bioceramics with tissues
  • All materials placed on live tissue, takes
    response from tissue
  • TISSUE - IMPLANT

35
Why Use Bioceramics?
General Options Toxic/ Imunogenic/ Disease transmission? Mechanical Properties? Bioactive? Degradable?
Autograft
Allograft
Metals
Ceramics
Polymers
Composites
  • Advantages to Bioceramics
  • Biological compatibility and activity
  • Less stress shielding
  • No disease transmission
  • Unlimited material supply
  • Disadvantage of Bioceramics
  • Brittleness not for load bearing applications
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