Fast element mapping of titanium wear around implants of different surface structures.

Ulrich Meyer, Martin Bühner, Andre Büchter, Birgit Kruse-Lösler, Thomas Stamm, Hans-Peter Wiesmann

Department of Maxillofacial and Plastic Facial Surgery, University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany.

Journal Article: Clinical Oral Implants Research (impact factor: 2.92). 05/2006; 17(2):206-11. DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0501.2005.01184.x

Abstract

The effect of unintended titanium release around oral implants remains a biological concern. The current study was undertaken to evaluate a new detection system of element mapping in biological probes. A new scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy detection method was used to map the features of titanium contamination in peri-implant bone around implants with different surface structures. The amount of titanium wear was highest adjacent to titanium-plasma-sprayed surfaces, followed by sandblastered large grid acid-etched and smooth surfaces. A high sensitivity of titanium detection over large areas of bone tissue was observed. A high spatial resolution of titanium wear particles (20 nm) could be reached and correlated to the ultrastructural morphological features of peri-implant tissue. Cells adjacent to titanium wear revealed no signs of morphological alterations on a nanoscale level at early periods of implant/bone interaction. The new technique may serve as a fast and effective tool to evaluate titanium release effects in biological probes.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

biological probes
 
bone tissue
 
Cells adjacent
 
different surface structures
 
implant/bone interaction
 
large areas
 
morphological alterations
 
nanoscale level
 
new detection system
 
oral implants
 
peri-implant tissue
 
sandblastered large grid acid-etched
 
signs
 
titanium
 
titanium contamination
 
titanium detection
 
titanium release effects
 
titanium-plasma-sprayed surfaces
 
ultrastructural morphological features
 
unintended titanium release