Effect of porosity on the fluid flow characteristics and mechanical properties of tantalum scaffolds
- 25 February 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials
- Vol. 73B (2), 315-324
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.b.30229
Abstract
In many cases of traumatic bone injury, bone grafting is required. The primary source of graft material is either autograft or allograft. The use of both material sources are well established, however, both suffer limitations. In response, many grafting alternatives are being explored. This article specifically focuses on a porous tantalum metal grafting material (Trabecular Metal™) marketed by Zimmer. Twenty-one cylindrical scaffolds were manufactured (66% to 88% porous) and tested for porosity, intrinsic permeability, tangent elastic modulus, and for yield stress and strain behavior. Scaffold microstructural geometries were also measured. Tantalum scaffold intrinsic permeability ranged from 2.1 × 10−10 to 4.8 × 10−10 m2 and tangent elastic modulus ranged from 373 MPa to 2.2 GPa. Both intrinsic permeability and tangent elastic modulus closely matched porosity-matched cancellous bone specimens from a variety of species and anatomic locations. Scaffold yield stress ranged from 4 to 12.7 MPa and was comparable to bovine and human cancellous bone. Yield strain was unaffected by scaffold porosity (average = 0.010 mm/mm). Understanding these structure–function relationships will help complete the basic physical characterization of this new material and will aid in the development of realistic mathematical models, ultimately enhancing future implant designs utilizing this material. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl BiomaterKeywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Examination of continuum and micro-structural properties of human vertebral cancellous bone using combined cellular solid modelsBiomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology, 2003
- Trabecular bone modulus–density relationships depend on anatomic siteJournal of Biomechanics, 2003
- Scaffolds in tissue engineering bone and cartilageBiomaterials, 2000
- Fabrication of biodegradable polymer scaffolds to engineer trabecular boneJournal of Biomaterials Science, Polymer Edition, 1996
- Fluid conductance of cancellous bone graft as a predictor for graft-host interface healingJournal of Biomechanics, 1996
- Mechanical properties and histological evaluation of sintered β-Ca2P2O7 with Na4P2O7 · 10H2O additionBiomaterials, 1995
- Differences between the tensile and compressive strengths of bovine tibial trabecular bone depend on modulusJournal of Biomechanics, 1994
- Biologic performance of tantalumClinical Materials, 1994
- Mechanical Properties of Trabecular Bone from the Proximal FemurJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1990
- Adaptive bone-remodeling theory applied to prosthetic-design analysisJournal of Biomechanics, 1987