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Early weight bearing of porous HA/TCP (60/40) ceramics in vivo: a longitudinal study in a segmental bone defect model of rabbit
Authors:Balçik Cenk  Tokdemir Turgut  Senköylü Alpaslan  Koç Nurşen  Timuçin Muharrem  Akin Serhat  Korkusuz Petek  Korkusuz Feza
Affiliation:

aDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Başkent University, Bağlıca, 06530 Ankara, Turkey

bDepartment of Engineering Sciences, Middle East Technical University, 06531 Ankara, Turkey

cDepartment of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Gazi University Medical Faculty, 06510 Ankara, Turkey

dDepartment of Metallurgical and Material Engineering, Middle East Technical University, 06531 Ankara, Turkey

eDepartment of Natural Gas and Petroleum Engineering, Petroleum Research Laboratory, Middle East Technical University, 06531 Ankara, Turkey

fDepartment of Histology and Embriology, Hacettepe University Medical Faculty, Sıhhiye, 06100 Ankara, Turkey

gMedical Center, Middle East Technical University, 06531 Ankara, Turkey

Abstract:Porous interconnected hydroxyapatite (HA) and HA/tricalcium phosphate (TCP) (60/40) ceramics are promising materials for hard tissue repair. However, the mechanical properties of these materials have not been accurately determined under weight-bearing conditions. In this study, newly developed HA and HA/TCP (60/40) ceramics were used with intramedullary fixation in segmental bone defects of rabbits. Early radiological, histological, densitometric and biomechanical changes were evaluated. The mean radiological grade of healing and bonding to bone was higher in HA/TCP (60/40) ceramics than that of pure HA ceramics but the difference was not statistically significant. The densities of both implanted ceramics improved with time, supported by the histological evaluation of bone matrix ingrowth into ceramic pores, whereas the densities at the bone–ceramic interface decreased gradually. Flexural resonant frequencies and three-point bending strength increased, revealing an increase in mechanical stability during this early critical time interval where implant and/or bone–implant interface failures occur frequently. It can be concluded that both HA and HA/TCP (60/40) ceramics have a limited application in the treatment of load-bearing segmental bone defects but did not fail at the early stages of implantation.
Keywords:Hydroxyapatite   Calcium phosphate ceramic   Early weight bearing   Bone defect   Biomechanics
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