ECM Journal European Cells & Materials Journal Founded by Scientists for Scientists
.

 Home

 

 ECM Journal

 ECM Conferences

 Journal Issues

 

 ECM Issues

 ECM Supplements

 About the Journal

 

 Scope

 Submission

 Editors

 Societies & Sponsors

 Contact

 Related Information

 

 Meetings

 Links

 Paper notification

 

  (Info)

 Site search

 
 


2001   Volume No 2 - pages 21-29

Title: Carbon materials in the treatment of soft and hard tissue injuries

Authors: M. Blazewicz

Address: Department of Special Ceramics, University of Mining and Metallurgy, al. Mickiewicza 30, 30-059 Cracow, Poland

E-mail: blazeew@uci.agh.edu.pl

Key Words: Carbon implants, carbon fibers, surface modification, tissue response, in vivo study.

Publication date: 30th August 2001

Abstract: Carbon-based implant materials are of interest because they are well accepted by the biological environment. Carbon fibrous materials developed in the Department of Special Ceramics of the University of Mining and Metallurgy in Cracow were tested in in vivo studies to determine their influence on the living body. For comparative purposes, different carbon fibers were prepared and subjected to different surface modifications. Carbon materials prepared in the form of braids were implanted in subcutaneous tissue of rabbits and into skeletal muscle of rats. Carbon fabrics were examined as scaffolds in reconstruction of bone defects.
The present study examined the synthesis-structure-property relationships of fibrous carbon samples with respect to the tissue response. It was shown that the tissue response depends on the form of the material form, the degree of order of the crystallites, the surface state and microstructural parameters. Carbon fibers with higher crystallinity and a better-organized graphite structure were assimilated by the body with more difficulty and small particles coming from these materials were found in the regional lymph nodes. Low- carbonized carbon fibers (small crystallite size) underwent partial fragmentation and reacted with the biological environment by being gradually resorbed in the implantation site. The presence of acidic groups on the surface of the carbon fibers enhanced phagocytosis of the carbon material by macrophages. Depending on the surface state of carbon fibers different rates of bone wound healing were observed.

Article download: Pages 21-29 (PDF file)

Acrobat Reader:
 

To read this article you will need to install Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer. Should you experience any difficulty in reading the PDF file we suggest that you save the file to your computer BEFORE opening it from Adobe Acrobat.

     
 

Last modified by Webmaster, March 27, 2007

AO Foundation

 AO Foundation