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Hard Tissue Repair and Replacement

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Cartilage, bone tissue, epithelium, nerve, blood forming tissue, adipose, and ... Attachment site for muscles making movement ... Cortical and cancellous screws ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hard Tissue Repair and Replacement


1
Hard Tissue Repair and Replacement
  • MTC594
  • 3/09/06

2
The Skeletal SystemBone Tissue
  • Skeleton composed of many different tissues
  • Dynamic and ever-changing throughout life
  • Cartilage, bone tissue, epithelium, nerve, blood
    forming tissue, adipose, and dense connective
    tissue

3
Functions of Bone
  • Supporting protecting soft tissues
  • Attachment site for muscles making movement
    possible
  • Storage of the minerals, calcium phosphate --
    mineral homeostasis
  • Blood cell production occurs in red bone marrow
  • Energy storage in yellow bone marrow

4
Anatomy of a Long Bone
  • Diaphysis shaft
  • Epiphysis one end of a long bone
  • Metaphysis growth plate region
  • Articular cartilage over joint surfaces acts as
    friction shock absorber
  • Medullary cavity marrow cavity
  • Endosteum lining of marrow cavity
  • Periosteum tough membrane covering bone but not
    the cartilage

5
Cell Types of Bone
  • Osteoprogenitor cells ---- undifferentiated cells
  • can divide to replace themselves can become
    osteoblasts
  • found in inner layer of periosteum and endosteum
  • Osteoblasts--form matrix collagen fibers but
    cant divide
  • Osteocytes ---mature cells that no longer secrete
    matrix
  • Osteoclasts---- huge multinucleated cells
  • function in bone resorption at surfaces such as
    endosteum

6
Matrix of Bone
  • Inorganic mineral salts provide bones hardness
  • Hydroxyapatite (calcium phosphate) calcium
    carbonate
  • Organic collagen fibers provide bones
    flexibility
  • Their tensile strength resists being stretched or
    torn
  • Remove minerals with acid rubbery structure
    results
  • Calcification is hardening of tissue when mineral
    crystals
  • deposit around collagen fibers
  • Bone is not completely solid since it has small
    spaces for vessels and red bone marrow
  • Spongy bone has many such spaces
  • Compact bone has very few

7
Bone Formation or Ossification
  • Intramembranous bone formation formation of
    bone directly
  • from mesenchymal cells.
  • All embryonic connective tissue begins as
    mesenchyme.
  • Endochondral ossification formation of bone
    from hyaline
  • cartilage.

8
Intramembranous Bone Formation
9
Endochondral Bone Formation (1)
10
Factors Affecting Bone Growth
  • Nutrition
  • Adequate levels of minerals and vitamins
  • Calcium and phosphorus for bone growth
  • Vitamin C for collagen formation
  • Vitamins K and B12 for protein synthesis
  • Vitamin D for calcium absorption
  • Sufficient levels of specific hormones
  • During childhood need insulinlike growth factor
  • Promotes cell division at epiphyseal plate
  • Need hGH (growth), thyroid (T3 T4) and insulin
  • Sex steroids at puberty
  • Growth spurt and closure of the epiphyseal growth
    plate
  • Estrogens promote female changes -- wider pelvis

11
Bone Remodeling
  • Ongoing since osteoclasts carve out small tunnels
    and
  • osteoblasts rebuild osteons.
  • Osteoclasts dissolve bone matrix and release
    calcium and
  • phosphorus into interstitial fluid (bone
    resorption)
  • Osteoblasts take over bone rebuilding (bone
    formation)
  • Continual redistribution of bone matrix along
    lines of
  • mechanical stress
  • Distal end of femur is fully remodeled every 4
    months

12
Exercise Bone Tissue
  • Pull on bone by skeletal muscle and gravity is
  • mechanical stress .
  • Stress increases deposition of mineral salts
  • production of collagen (calcitonin prevents bone
  • loss)
  • Lack of mechanical stress results in bone loss
  • Reduced activity while in a cast
  • Astronauts in weightlessness
  • Bedridden person
  • Weight-bearing exercises build bone mass (walking
  • or weight-lifting)

13
Osteoporosis
  • Decreased bone mass resulting in porous bones
  • Those at risk
  • White, thin menopausal, smoking, drinking female
    with
  • family history
  • Athletes who are not menstruating due to
    decreased
  • body fat decreased estrogen levels
  • People allergic to milk or with eating disorders
    whose
  • intake of calcium is too low
  • Prevention or decrease in severity
  • Adequate diet, weight-bearing exercise,
    estrogen
  • replacement therapy (for menopausal women)
  • Behavior when young may be most important factor

14
Hard tissue repair and replacement
15
Hard tissue repair and replacement
  • Design considerations
  • Material properties
  • Fatigue strength
  • Corrosion resistance
  • Shape
  • Surface Characteristics
  • Smooth/Rough
  • Porous/nonporous
  • Fixation of biological molecules

16
Hard tissue repair and replacement
  • Design considerations (cont.)
  • Minimal friction
  • Low production of wear products
  • Biocompatibility
  • Easily removed?

17
Temporary internal fixation devices
  • Wire (twisted knotted)
  • Reattachment or additional stability
  • Reduction in strength corrosion at deformed
    regions

Radial wires
18
Temporary internal fixation devices
  • Pins
  • Bone fragment fixation, guidance of large screws
  • Straight wires
  • Holding power comes from elastic deformation
    or surrounding bone

19
Temporary internal fixation devices
  • Screws
  • Bone fixation attachment of metallic plate to
    bone
  • Cortical and cancellous screws
  • Holding power affected by size of pilot drill
    hole, depth of screw engagement, outside diameter
    of screw and quality of bone

20
Temporary internal fixation devices
  • Plates
  • Facilitate fixation of bone fragments
  • Rigid/high elastic modulus (stainless steel)
    facilitates healing
  • Flexible/low elastic modulus (titanium alloy)
    facilitates loading of bone
  • Flexible plates allow micromotion and
    physiological loading of underlying bone
  • Low contacting plates allow revascularization of
    underlying bone

21
Temporary internal fixation devices
  • Intramedullary nails
  • Internal struts to stabilize long bone fractures
  • Resist multidirectional bending
  • Large contact surface between nail and internal
    cortex of bone required

22
Permanent joint replacement
  • Hip, ankle, shoulder, elbow, finger joint,
    intervertebral disc
  • Materials
  • CoCr alloys (femoral head, femoral stem, wire
    nails)
  • Alumina (femoral head)
  • Zirconia (femoral head)
  • Ti alloy (femoral stem, screws, wire, flexible
    plate, nails)
  • UHMWPE (acetabular cup)
  • Monolithic cup
  • Modular lining of a metallic shell
  • Stainless steel (wire, pins, screws, rigid
    plates, nails)
  • PLA/PGA (pins, screws)
  • PE (femoral head)

23
Permanent joint replacement
24
Permanent joint replacement
  • Total artificial hip
  • Implant fixation methods
  • Mechanical interlock
  • Press-fitting
  • PMMA-bone cement
  • Threaded components
  • Biological fixation
  • Porous/textured surfaces
  • Direct chemical bonding between implant and
    bone

25
Permanent joint replacement
  • PMMA bone cement
  • Immediate stability and weight bearing
  • Anchoring power depends upon ability to
    penetrate between bone trabeculae during
    insertion of device
  • Viscoelastic properties
  • Shock absorption
  • Uniform transmission of load between implant
    and bone
  • Prevent localized stress and fatigue failure

26
Permanent joint replacement
  • PMMA cement
  • Two interfaces
  • Bone-cement
  • Cement-implant
  • Potential problems
  • Loosening at interfaces
  • Macro/micromotion
  • Bone loss
  • Formation of fibrous membrane at interface
  • Toxic effects of MMA monomers
  • Inflammation/necrosis of bone
  • Devascularization
  • Accumulation of wear debris/inflammation

27
Permanent joint replacement
  • Porous ingrowth fixation
  • 100-350 micron pores
  • Requires immobilization for osseointegration (12
    weeks)
  • Bone mass should be near normal for optimal
    integration
  • Difficult removal
  • Materials (porous coatings)
  • Pure titanium
  • Titanium alloy
  • Tantalum
  • HA

28
Permanent joint replacement
  • Porous ingrowth fixation
  • Potential problems
  • Lack of osseointegration and failure
  • Uneven load sharing resulting in resumption of
    bone
  • Flaking of coating resulting in inflammatory
    responses

29
Interactions at the bone-implant interface
  • Reaction of host to biomaterial implant ()
  • Protein adsorption/Protein desorption
  • Acute inflammation
  • Adsorption of bone-inducing proteins
  • Osteopontin/bone sialoprotein
  • Formation of laminae limitans
  • Osteointegration (conduction/induction)
  • Extension of bone away from biomaterial
  • Extension of bone towards biomaterial

30
Interactions at the bone-implant interface
  • Reaction of host to biomaterial implant (-)
  • Bone resorption around implant and loosening
  • High stress concentrations
  • Stress shielding
  • Micromotion
  • Macromotion
  • Necrosis, osteolysis, bone resorption, loosening
    of implant
  • Fibrosis at implant-cement-bone interfaces
  • Inflammatory responses, osteolysis and loosening
  • Wear debris-UHMWPE
  • Corrosion
  • Friction at implant-bone interface

31
Interactions at the bone-implant interface
  • Reaction of implant to host
  • Surface changes-oxidation of metallic implants
  • Release of material-metal ions with local and
    systemic release
  • Hypersensitivity reaction
  • Chronic inflammation
  • FBR
  • Osteoclast activation
  • Bone resorption
  • Device failure
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