The Ceramic wires boosted cell growth by nearly 80 percent
New coating may help joint
replacements bond better with bone
Cells
show signs of healthy growth in this transmission electron microscope image,
taken 15 hours after they were placed on a titanium surface coated with a
carpet of tiny nanowires. In the inset (upper left), filaments can be seen
reaching out from cells to the surface, which indicates a strong connection.
Ohio State University engineers are developing the coating, which could someday
help broken bones and joint replacements heal faster. Credit: Sheikh Akbar,
Ohio State University.
Broken
bones and joint replacements may someday heal faster, thanks to an unusual
coating for medical implants under development at The Ohio State University.
Researchers here have found that bone cells grow and reproduce faster on a textured surface than they do on a smooth one—and they grow best when they can cling to a microscopic shag carpet made of tiny metal oxide wires.
Researchers here have found that bone cells grow and reproduce faster on a textured surface than they do on a smooth one—and they grow best when they can cling to a microscopic shag carpet made of tiny metal oxide wires.
In tests,
the wires boosted cell growth by nearly 80 percent compared to
other surfaces, which suggests that the coating would help healthy bone form a
strong bond with an implant faster.
The
engineers developed an affordable technique for creating the wires, which they
describe in a paper in the July 2013 issue of the journal Ceramics
International.
"What's
really exciting about this technique is that we don't have to carve the
nanowires from a solid piece of metal or alloy. We can grow them from scratch,
by exploiting the physics and chemistry of the materials," said Sheikh
Akbar, professor of materials science and engineering at Ohio State.
"That's why we call our process 'nanostructures by material design.'"
Akbar's
team (co-advised by his colleague, Suliman Dregia, associate professor of materials
science and engineering) was able to grow the wires by tailoring the
mix of materials and gases inside a furnace. At temperatures around 1,300
degrees Fahrenheit, fine filaments of titanium dioxide rose from a smooth
titanium surface. Each was tens of thousands of times smaller than a human
hair.
This
scanning electron microscope image shows a single wire, tens of thousands of
times thinner than a human hair, which was created in a furnace at Ohio State
University. Engineers here are growing carpets of these wires on titanium
surfaces .
But then
something unusual happened that the engineers couldn't explain. Each wire grew
a protective coating of aluminum oxide around itself—like a layer of bark
around a tree trunk. The growth of the coating might make sense, if the
material in the furnace were a titanium alloy that contained aluminum. But in
this case, the researchers were working with pure titanium, so it's not clear
how the wires grew an aluminum coating.
"It's
strange that we don't completely understand why this process works the way it
does. We're going to have to do some fancy microscopy to figure it out, but we
do know that the wires only form under just the right conditions," Akbar
said.
In tests,
the researchers grew bone cancer cells on three different surfaces: smooth
titanium, smooth titanium dioxide, and the nanowire carpet. (They
chose the cancer cells because the cells are particularly hardy, and also
reproduce the same way healthy bone cells do.)
The
biggest difference in cell growth occurred within the first 15 hours of
testing, when researchers measured a 20 percent higher concentration of the
bone-growth enzyme alkaline phosphatase being produced by the cells growing on
the nanowires.
By the end of the study, there were around 90,000 cells per square centimeter
on the nanowire surface—80 percent more than the 50,000 cells per square
centimeter on each of the other two surfaces.
Study
co-author Derek Hansford, associate professor of biomedical engineering and
materials science and engineering, said that the coating could aid people who
have hip and knee replacements, dental implants, or broken bones that require screws
and plates to repair them.
"Our
hope is that this surface treatment will become a simple-to-implement
modification to titanium implants to help them form a stronger interface with
surrounding bone tissue. A stronger interface means that implants and bones
will be better able to share mechanical loads, and we can better preserve
healthy bone and soft tissue around the implant site," Hansford said.
Akbar
believes that the price is right for commercial development. $100 worth of
metal foil is enough to make hundreds of samples.
The
method to grow the wires is also exceedingly simple. Beyond setting the right
mix of materials and gases, it involves little other than pressing a button to
turn on the laboratory furnace.
"Seriously,
if you spent the day in my lab, you could learn how to do it yourself,"
Akbar said.
He and
his team are now exploring other material and gas combinations to make
different nano-sized shapes for cell growth and chemical sensing.
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