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Interfacial kinetics of titanium- and cobalt-based implant alloys in human serum: metal release and biofilm formation
- Source :
- Scopus-Elsevier
- Publication Year :
- 2003
-
Abstract
- The biocompatibility of metallic implant surfaces is governed in large part by the interfacial kinetics associated with metal release and protein binding. The kinetics of metal release from, and protein binding to, cobalt- and titanium-based implant alloys in human serum were investigated by (1) measuring the temporal release of Cr and Ti into serum from Co-Cr-Mo (ASTM F-75) and Ti implant alloys (Ti-6Al-4V: ASTM F136, and commercially pure Ti, cpTi: ASTM F67), respectively; (2) examining the composition of human serum proteins adsorbed onto the surfaces of Co- and Ti-based implant alloys; and (3) identifying the serum proteins associated with the binding of soluble Cr and Ti degradation products. Analysis of metal dissolution kinetics found that Cr was released from Co-based implant alloy at an order of magnitude higher than Ti was released from Ti-based implant alloys. Serum became saturated with soluble CR and Ti at levels as high as 3,250 ng/mL Ti from cpTi; 3,750 ng/mL Ti from Ti-6Al-4V; and 35,400 ng/mL Cr from Co-Cr-Mo degradation. The observation that human serum binds more released metal from Co-based alloy dissolution was consistent with the observed differences in biofilm composition between the two alloys, where additional serum protein(s) of approximately ≈140 (kDa) molecular weight were detected on Co-based implant alloy surfaces. However, both Cr and Ti released from Co- and Ti-based alloys exhibited a bimodal binding pattern to both low molecular weight serum protein(s) (
- Subjects :
- Materials science
Biocompatibility
Surface Properties
Kinetics
Alloy
Biomedical Engineering
chemistry.chemical_element
Biocompatible Materials
engineering.material
Biomaterials
Metal
Alloys
Humans
Dissolution
Titanium
Metallurgy
technology, industry, and agriculture
Blood Proteins
Cobalt
Prostheses and Implants
equipment and supplies
Blood proteins
chemistry
visual_art
Biofilms
visual_art.visual_art_medium
engineering
Nuclear chemistry
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15493296
- Volume :
- 65
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of biomedical materials research. Part A
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4ec744c64f32d6ff8a662034cb5d0ddf