Early bone growth on the surface of titanium implants in rat femur is enhanced by an amorphous diamond coating

Authors

  • Jarkko JP Jaatinen
  • Rami K Korhonen
  • Alpo Pelttari
  • Heikki J Helminen
  • Hannu Korhonen
  • Reijo Lappalainen
  • Heikki Kröger

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/17453674.2011.579522

Abstract

Background and purpose Amorphous diamond (AD) is a durable and compatible biomaterial for joint prostheses. Knowledge regarding bone growth on AD-coated implants and their early-stage osseointegration is poor. We investigated bone growth on AD-coated cementless intramedullary implants implanted in rats. Titanium was chosen as a reference due to its well-known performance. Materials and methods We placed AD-coated and non-coated titanium implants (Ra ≈ 0.2 μm) into the femoral bone marrow of 25 rats. The animals were divided in 2 groups according to implant coating and they were killed after 4 or 12 weeks. The osseointegration of the implants was examined from hard tissue specimens by measuring the new bone formation on their surface. Results 4 weeks after the operation, the thickness of new bone in the AD-coated group was greater than that in the non-coated group (15.3 (SD 7.1) μm vs. 7.6 (SD 6.0) μm). 12 weeks after the operation, the thickness of new bone was similar in the non-coated group and in the AD-coated group. Interpretation We conclude that AD coating of femoral implants can enhance bone ongrowth in rats in the acute, early stage after the operation and might be an improvement over earlier coatings.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2011-08-01

How to Cite

Jaatinen, J. J., Korhonen, R. K., Pelttari, A., Helminen, H. J., Korhonen, H., Lappalainen, R., & Kröger, H. (2011). Early bone growth on the surface of titanium implants in rat femur is enhanced by an amorphous diamond coating. Acta Orthopaedica, 82(4), 499–503. https://doi.org/10.3109/17453674.2011.579522