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LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Researchers at Purdue University have
shown that artificial joints might be improved by making
the implants out of tiny carbon tubes and filaments
that are all aligned in the same direction, mimicking
the alignment of collagen fibers and natural ceramic
crystals in real bones.
The researchers already have
shown in a series of experiments that bone cells in
Petri dishes attach better to materials that possess
smaller surface bumps than are found on conventional
materials used to make artificial joints. The smaller
features also stimulate the growth of more new bone
tissue, which is critical for the proper attachment
of artificial joints once they are implanted.
Now, the Purdue researchers
have shown even more enhanced cell adhesion and growth
when so-called "nanotubes" and nanofibers
are aligned in the same direction. This orientation
is similar to the way collagen and natural ceramic
crystals, called hydroxyapatite, are aligned in bone,
said Thomas Webster, an assistant professor of biomedical
engineering at Purdue.
Findings were presented at
two recent scientific conferences in research papers
written by Webster; Purdue physics doctoral student
Dongwoo Khang; and three researchers from the Seoul
National University in South Korea, physics doctoral
students Minbaek Lee and Sun Namkung, and physics
professor Seunghun Hong.
Previous experiments in the
Purdue lab have shown that about one-third more bone-forming
cells, or osteoblasts, attach to carbon nanotubes
that possess surface bumps about as wide as 100 nanometers,
or billionths of a meter. Fewer bone cells stick to
conventional titanium, which has surface features
on the scale of microns, or millionths of a meter.
The nanometer-scale bumps mimic
surface features of proteins and natural tissues,
prompting cells to stick better and promoting the
growth of new cells, Webster said. The findings also
suggest that using such nanometer-scale materials
might cause less of a rejection response from the
body. Rejection eventually weakens the attachment
of implants and causes them to become loose and painful,
requiring replacement surgery.
Aligning the nanotubes to further
mimic natural bone also might provide more strength,
Webster said.
Researchers used two methods
to align the tiny nanotube structures, which have
diameters of about 60 nanometers. One nanometer is
roughly the length of 10 hydrogen atoms strung together.
A human hair is more than 1,000 times wider than the
nanotubes used in the study.
In one method, researchers
mixed the nanotubes in a polymer, or plastic, and
passed an electric current through the mixture. Because
nanotubes have the same natural electrical charge,
they react to electricity by orienting themselves
in the same direction. Once the polymer solidifies,
the nanotubes are fixed in the aligned position.
The research team also aligned
the nanotubes using another method in which the nanotubes
are poured into grids of tiny channels. Because the
channels are so narrow, the tubes can only fit lengthwise,
causing them to become aligned. The grids can then
be removed, leaving behind the aligned nanotubes.
The researchers then added
the aligned nanotubes to a suspension of dyed bone
cells in a small container. After one hour, the nanotubes
were washed and a microscope was used to count how
many of the dyed osteoblasts adhered to the material.
Out of 3,000 bone cells per square centimeter of surface
area, about 80 percent specifically stuck to and aligned
with the carbon nanotubes - or about twice as many
as those that adhered to non-aligned nanotubes in
previous work.
"So, in a very short period
of time, one hour, we're already seeing a big improvement
in how well the cells stick to the nanotubes,"
Webster said.
Future research may focus on
combining the two methods for aligning nanotubes.
Using the grid technique creates a greater number
of aligned nanotubes on the surface, which helps to
increase bone-cell adhesion and alignment, whereas
using electricity could better stimulate the growth
of new bone tissue.
The research has been funded
by the National Science Foundation though the NSF
Nanoscale Exploratory Research program.
Findings were presented in
October during the Biomedical Engineering Society's
annual meeting and a conference by the Society for
Biomaterials entitled Biomaterials in Regenerative
Medicine: The Advent of Combination Products. Both
meetings were in Philadelphia.
Writer: Emil Venere, (765) 494-4709, venere@purdue.edu
Source: Thomas Webster, (765) 496-7516, twebster@purdue.edu
Related Web sites:
Thomas Webster:
https://Engineering.Purdue.edu/BME/People/
viewPersonById?resource_id=2257
Nano Letters: http://pubs.acs.org/journals/nalefd/
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