ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Science

Researchers discover artificial bone coating to avoid secondary surgical procedure

Seoul [South Korea], October 25 (ANI): Researchers develop an artificial bone coating with stronger adhesion strength which may improve the success rate of implant surgeries.

ANI Oct 25, 2020 20:28 IST googleads

Representative image

Seoul [South Korea], October 25 (ANI): Researchers develop an artificial bone coating with stronger adhesion strength which may improve the success rate of implant surgeries.
The research was conducted at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) Center for Biomaterials.
Bone disease is becoming increasingly prevalent in modern society due to population ageing among other factors, and the use of dental and orthopaedic implants to treat bone disease has been on the rise.
Despite the long history, however, there are still a number of issues associated with implant procedures such as a loose implant resulting from slow integration into the bone tissue or an inflammation necessitating a secondary surgical procedure.
To mitigate these issues, there has been an attempt to coat the implant material with 'artificial bone' that has the same composition as the actual human bone. Conventional coating methods, however, require a synthesis process to manufacture the artificial bone material and a separate coating process, which takes a long time. Plus, the binding between the substrate and the artificial bone coating layer tends to be weak, resulting in damage or even drop-off, and strong coating methods that could be applied to actual patients in a clinical setting were rare.
Under these circumstances, Dr Hojeong Jeon's research team at KIST's Center for Biomaterials announced that they have developed a ceramic artificial bone coating with triple the adhesion strength compared to conventional coating materials.
The research team developed a technology to induce artificial bone coating, which had taken at least a day and required dozens of steps, in just one hour using a single process. By using the technique, there is no need to synthesize the raw material for artificial bone coating in a separate process, and it is possible to create the coating with a nanosecond laser without any expensive equipment or heat-treatment process.
Not only that, it is possible to form a coating layer with a stronger binding power than the few artificial bone coating techniques applied clinically today. Also, in case of using this process, it results in robust coating not only on metal surfaces but even on the surfaces of polymer materials such as orthopaedic plastic implants, which has not been possible with conventional processes.
In order to reduce the number of steps involved in the process as well as the duration and at the same time ensure robust coating, Dr Jeon's team positioned the material to be coated in a solution containing calcium and phosphorous, the main components of the bone and irradiated it with the laser. The temperature was raised in a localized manner at the target site of the laser, causing a reaction involving the calcium and phosphorous to produce ceramic artificial bone (hydroxyapatite) and the formation of a coating layer.
Unlike the conventional coating methods, the synthesis of the artificial bone component is induced by laser and, at the same time, the surface of the substrate is heated above the melting point for the artificial bone material to get adsorbed on the melted surface and get hardened as is, which maximizes the binding strength.
Dr Jeon said, "The hydroxyapatite coating method using nanosecond laser is a simple way to induce bioactivity in non-bio-active materials such as titanium and PEEK that are commonly used as biomaterials. I anticipate that it will become a game-changer in that it will have wide applications to diverse medical devices where osseointegration is needed. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

New method guides magnetism without magnets

New method guides magnetism without magnets

Researchers at Paul Scherrer Institute PSI have demonstrated an innovative method to control magnetism in materials using an energy-efficient electric field.

Read More
Science

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Researchers at the University of Bristol discovered that ancient frog ancestors survived the biggest mass extinction of species by eating on freshwater prey that evaded terrestrial predators.

Read More
Science

New insights into how cancer evades the immune system: Study

New insights into how cancer evades the immune system: Study

Immunotherapy research primarily focuses on better recognition of cancer cells by the body's own immune system. Researchers at Amsterdam UMC and Moffitt Cancer Center have taken a different approach.

Read More
Science

Scientists use AI to better understand nanoparticles: Study

Scientists use AI to better understand nanoparticles: Study

A group of scientists has created a way to illuminate the dynamic behavior of nanoparticles, which are essential components in the production of pharmaceuticals, electronics, and industrial and energy-conversion materials.

Read More
Science

New device could allow you to taste cake in virtual reality

New device could allow you to taste cake in virtual reality

The 'e-Taste' interface employs sensors and wireless chemical dispensers to enable remote taste perception, often known as gestation. Field testing done by researchers at The Ohio State University confirmed the device's ability to digitally simulate a range of taste intensities, while still offering variety and safety for the user.

Read More
Science

Strand Life Sciences launches portal for rare disease diagnosis

Strand Life Sciences launches portal for rare disease diagnosis

Marking Rare Disease Day, Strand Life Sciences, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries and a leading genomics research company, has launched the StrandOmics Portal, an innovative digital platform designed to assist doctors in diagnosing rare diseases more efficiently.

Read More
Science

Study reveals impact of animals as architects of Earth

Study reveals impact of animals as architects of Earth

A new study led by Professor Gemma Harvey from Queen Mary University of London has revealed how hundreds of species shape the landscapes we depend on, from termite mounds visible from space to beavers creating wetlands and hippos carving drainage systems.

Read More
Science

Opposing arrows of time emerge from certain quantum systems

Opposing arrows of time emerge from certain quantum systems

Researchers at the University of Surrey made a thought-provoking discovery. A new study reveals that opposing arrows of time can theoretically emerge from certain quantum systems.

Read More
Science

'Creation of black holes without singularities through gravity'

'Creation of black holes without singularities through gravity'

Traditional black holes, as predicted by Albert Einstein's theory of General Relativity, contain what are known as singularities, i.e. points where the laws of physics break down. Identifying how singularities are resolved in the context of quantum gravity is one of the fundamental problems in theoretical physics. Now, a team of experts has described the creation of regular black holes from gravitational effects without the need for the existence of exotic matter required by some previous models.

Read More
Science

New technology enhances gravitational-wave detection: Study

New technology enhances gravitational-wave detection: Study

A team of physicists led by Jonathan Richardson of the University of California, Riverside, demonstrated how new optical technology can extend the detection range of gravitational-wave observatories such as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO, and pave the way for future observatories.

Read More