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Approach to the Fatigue and Cellular Behavior of Superficially Modified Porous Titanium Dental Implants.

Paloma TruebaCarlos NavarroMercè GinerJosé Antonio Rodríguez-OrtizMaría-José Montoya-GarcíaErnesto J Delgado-PujolLuisa Marleny Rodriguez-AlbeloYadir Torres-Hernández
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
In this work, the fatigue and cellular performance of novel superficially treated porous titanium dental implants made up using conventional powder metallurgy and space-holder techniques (30 vol.% and 50 vol.%, both with a spacer size range of 100-200 µm) are evaluated. Before the sintering stage, a specific stage of CNC milling of the screw thread of the implant is used. After the consolidation processing, different surface modifications are performed: chemical etching and bioactive coatings (BG 45S5 and BG 1393). The results are discussed in terms of the effect of the porosity, as well as the surface roughness, chemical composition, and adherence of the coatings on the fatigue resistance and the osteoblast cells' behavior for the proposed implants. Macro-pores are preferential sites of the nucleation of cracks and bone cell adhesion, and they increase the cellular activity of the implants, but decrease the fatigue life. In conclusion, SH 30 vol.% dental implant chemical etching presents the best bio-functional (in vitro osseointegration) and bio-mechanical (stiffness, yield strength and fatigue life) balance, which could ensure the required characteristics of cortical bone tissue.
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