Abstract

The use of titanium bone fixation plates is considered the standard of care for skeletal reconstructive surgery. Highly stiff titanium bone fixation plates provide immobilization immediately after the surgery. However, after the bone healing stage, they may cause stress shielding and lead to bone resorption and failure of the surgery. Stiffness-modulated or stiffness-matched Nitinol bone fixation plates that are fabricated via additive manufacturing (AM) have been recently introduced by our group as a long-lasting solution for minimizing the stress shielding and the follow-on bone resorption. Up to this point, we have modeled the performance of Nitinol bone fixation plates in mandibular reconstruction surgery and investigated the possibility of fabricating these implants. In this study, for the first time the realistic design of stiffness-modulated Nitinol bone fixation plates is presented. Plates with different levels of stiffness were fabricated, mechanically tested, and used for verifying the design approach. Followed by the design verification, to achieve superelastic bone fixation plates we proposed the use of Ni-rich Nitinol powder for the AM process and updated the models based on that. Superelastic Nitinol bone fixation plates with the extreme level of porosity were fabricated, and a chemical polishing procedure used to remove the un-melted powder was developed using SEM analysis. Thermomechanical evaluation of the polished bone fixation plates verified the desired superelasticity based on finite element (FE) simulations, and the chemical analysis showed good agreement with the ASTM standard.

Highlights

  • Oral cancer, infection, tumors, and trauma may lead to structural defects in the mandible either aesthetically or functionally, which needs to be treated through reconstructive surgery

  • We have shown that the additive manufacturing method, in the form of selective laser melting (SLM), can be used for the fabrication of porous NiTi bone fixation plates [17,18]

  • The as-fabricated parts were tested mechanically, and the experimental results were in a good agreement with the finite element (FE) model

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Summary

Introduction

Infection, tumors, and trauma may lead to structural defects in the mandible either aesthetically or functionally, which needs to be treated through reconstructive surgery. We have shown that the additive manufacturing method, in the form of selective laser melting (SLM), can be used for the fabrication of porous NiTi bone fixation plates [17,18]. To validate the design and modeling procedure, designed bone fixation plates with different levels of porosity were fabricated via selective laser melting using Ni50.1Ti powder and mechanically tested under tension. After validation of the modeling procedure, to achieve superelastic behavior, Ni-rich Ni50.8Ti powder was used for the fabrication of Metals 2020, 10, x FOR PEER REVIEW procedure, designed bone fixation plates with different levels of porosity were fabricated via selective laser melting using Ni50.1Ti powder and mechanically tested under tension. Proper methodology for polishing and removing un-melted powder is proposed

Materials
Modeling
Mechanical Evaluation
Superelastic Stiffness-Modulated Bone Fixation Plates
Thermomechanical Behavior
Chemical Polishing
Chemical
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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