Title: Implantable Photocrosslinked Elastomer Delivery System for InterferonGamma
1CHEE 340 Tutorial 2
2Biomaterials Introduction
- Define a biomaterial.
- A biomaterial is a nonviable material used in a
medical device, intended to interact with
biological systems.1 - Give four examples of biomaterials and their uses
in tissues/organs. - -
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- 1 Williams, D.F. (1987) Definitions in
Biomaterials. Proceedings of a Consensus
Conference of the - European Society For Biomaterials, England,
1986, Elsevier, New York.
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3Biomaterials Introduction
- Name the four desirable properties of
biomaterials. - -
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- What are the four classes of biomaterials. Give
examples. - -
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4Biomaterials Material Properties
- The two major material properties of biomaterials
are _____________ and _____________. - The applied loads that a biomaterial is required
to take are _____________ and _____________. - The _____________ effect is mainly seen in
_____________ biomaterials.
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5Biomaterials Material Properties
- Define Stress relaxation.
- The application of a sudden strain to the
sample and following the stress as a function of
time as the strain is held constant.
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6Biomaterials Material Properties
- Define Creep.
- A constant stress is instantaneously applied
to the material and the resulting strain is
followed as a function of time. - Why is calculated ultimate tensile strength
larger compared to measured ultimate tensile
strength? - -
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7Biomaterials Material Properties Surface Energy
- Define Fatigue.
- The progressive deterioration of the strength of
a material or structural component during service
such that failure can occur at much lower stress
levels than the ultimate stress of the material. - The significance of Surface Energy with respects
to biomaterials are - -
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8Biomaterials Surface Energy
- At the surface (interface) there are
_____________ forces and _____________ forces of
attraction and repulsion. - The three main forces that exist are
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9Biomaterials Surface Energy
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10Biomaterials Surface Energy
- Define Critical Surface Tension.
- The critical surface tension is the surface
tension of a liquid that would completely wet the
solid of interest.
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11Implantation Response Wound Healing
- ______________ is a __________________ of events
initiated by injury. - The three phases involved in wound healing are
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- What are the four stages involved in clotting/
thrombosis? - -
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12Implantation Response Coagulation Pathways
- The two coagulation pathways are
__________________ and __________________.
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13Implantation Response Intravascular Cells
- What is a pathogen?
- An infectious agent that causes disease
- In order for a pathogen to enter the body it must
first overcome the __________________ and then
the __________________. - White blood cells include
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- The first line of defense is the
__________________ tissue.
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14Implantation Response Innate Immune Response
- The __________________ begins when a pathogen
breaches the epithelium. - The cells of the immune system determine _______
from _______ by recognizing molecules on the
microbe surface. - ______________ and ______________ cells are
immune cells that reside within the _______. - ______________ are phagocytes that reside in the
blood but can ______________ into tissue during
______________.
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15Implantation Response Phagocytosis
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
____________________________________
_______________________________________________
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16Implantation Response Inflammatory Response
- Inflammation response is characterized by
________________, ________________,
________________ and ________________ - Due to _________ of cells following _________,
there is a local _________ in tissue mass. - ________________ and ________________ are
recruited to site to begin ________________
(which includes _________ and __________________).
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