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    High toughness resorbable brushite-gypsum fiber-reinforced cements

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    Date
    2021
    Author
    Moussa H.
    El Hadad A.
    Sarrigiannidis S.
    Saad A.
    Wang M.
    Taqi D.
    Al-Hamed F.S.
    Salmer�n-S�nchez M.
    Cerruti M.
    Tamimi F.
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    The ideal bone substitute material should be mechanically strong, biocompatible with a resorption rate matching the rate of new bone formation. Brushite (dicalcium phosphate dihydrate) cement is a promising bone substitute material but with limited resorbability and mechanical properties. To improve the resorbability and mechanical performance of brushite cements, we incorporated gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate) and diazonium-treated polyglactin fibers which are well-known for their biocompatibility and bioresorbability. Here we show that by combining brushite and gypsum, we were able to fabricate biocompatible composite cements with high fracture toughness (0.47 MPa�m1/2) and a resorption rate that matched the rate of new bone formation. Adding functionalized polyglactin fibers to this composite cement further improved the fracture toughness up to 1.00 MPa�m1/2. XPS and SEM revealed that the improvement in fracture toughness is due to the strong interfacial bonding between the functionalized fibers and the cement matrix. This study shows that adding gypsum and functionalized polyglactin fibers to brushite cements results in composite biomaterials that combine high fracture toughness, resorbability, and biocompatibility, and have great potential for bone regeneration.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.msec.2021.112205
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/31815
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    • Dental Medicine Research [‎410‎ items ]

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