Abstract

Bioactive glasses and inorganic/organic hybrids have great potential as biomedical implant materials. Sol–gel hybrids with interpenetrating networks of silica and biodegradable polymers can combine the bioactive properties of a glass with the toughness of a polymer. However, traditional calcium sources such as calcium nitrate and calcium chloride are unsuitable for hybrids. In this study calcium was incorporated by chelation to the polymer component. The calcium salt form of poly(γ-glutamic acid) (γCaPGA) was synthesized for use as both a calcium source and as the biodegradable toughening component of the hybrids. Hybrids of 40wt.% γCaPGA were successfully formed and had fine scale integration of Ca and Si ions, according to secondary ion mass spectrometry imaging, indicating a homogeneous distribution of organic and inorganic components. 29Si magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance data demonstrated that the network connectivity was unaltered with changing polymer molecular weight, as there was no perturbation to the overall Si speciation and silica network formation. Upon immersion in simulated body fluid a hydroxycarbonate apatite surface layer formed on the hybrids within 1week. The polymer molecular weight (Mw 30–120kDa) affected the mechanical properties of the resulting hybrids, but all hybrids had large strains to failure, >26%, and compressive strengths, in excess of 300MPa. The large strain to failure values showed that γCaPGA hybrids exhibited non-brittle behaviour whilst also incorporating calcium. Thus calcium incorporation by chelation to the polymer component is justified as a novel approach in hybrids for biomedical materials.

Highlights

  • Bone regeneration therapies are needed that reduce the reliance on autograft procedures, in which harvesting of the bone can cause severe pain and complications at the donor site [1]

  • Synthetic bioactive ceramic bone graft substitutes that can bond with bone and stimulate osteogenesis are currently used in orthopaedic surgery

  • A range of molecular weights of cCaPGA from 30 to 120 kDa were used in hybrid synthesis, as this represents molecular weights above and within this target range

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bone regeneration therapies are needed that reduce the reliance on autograft procedures, in which harvesting of the bone can cause severe pain and complications at the donor site [1]. Acellular devices, such as synthetic scaffolds that can act as temporary templates for bone regeneration, have potential, but development of a material that can fulfil all the criteria for a regenerative scaffold is a challenge [2,3,4].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call