Abstract
Aims: to investigate the mechanical properties of a new nanocomposite bone cement radiopacified with Barium Sulfate (BaSu) nanoparticles added at different concentrations, compared to a control cement with the classical BaSu microparticles.
Methods: the starting material was Endurance (J& J/ DePuy, USA) bone cement without BaSu; the radi-opacifier particles have been mixed into the cement powder in several different concentrations of 5, 10, 20, 30, 40% of the weight respectively. Two groups were studied: controls, with classical medical grade BaSu particles (average size 1000 nm) and nanocomposites, with nanoparticles (av. size 100 nm). In accordance with the ASTM, an Instron 4201 machine tested a minimum of 6 specimens for each concentration. Tensile tests were performed at cross-head speeds of 1mm/sec, while compression tests were performed at 25,4 mm/sec. Results were statistically analysed.
Results: nanocomposites had higher compressive Yield strength in all groups except 30 and 40% and lower compressive Modulus in all but 5% group (no significant difference). Nanocomposites had higher tensile values in 5%, 10%, and 40% concentrations for Strain-to-failure, yield stress, and Work-of-Fracture, and no significant differences in the other concentrations. Tensile modulus had not statistically significant variations. Higher BaSu concentrations give increases in tensile modulus and decreases in the other tensile properties for both the groups. The nanocomposite outperformed the control in the 5, 10, and 20% groups, while the 30 and 40% groups had no significant differences; all the results were above ASTM requirements.
Conclusions: bone cement has several uses, like joint replacement, filling defects in tumour or revision surgery, and more recently vertebroplasty. These applications require different properties and would have benefits from the possibility to change viscosity, radiopacity, time of polymerisation, mechanical features. Previous studies have demonstrated the improved performances of the new nanocomposite cement at the clinical used concentration of 10%. This study investigated the possibility to augment the concentration of BaSu and therefore the radiopacity and their relative effect on the mechanical properties; the results demonstrated the good compliance of the nanoparticles cement in this field. This would be useful in particular for specific applications such vertebroplasty. Further studies are needed to investigate and determine the ideal fatigue, handling and mixing properties, viscosity and radiopacity.
The abstracts were prepared by Ms Grazia Gliozzi. Correspondence should be addressed to her at the Italian Orthopaedic Research Society, Laboratory for Pathophysiology, Instituti Ortopedici Rizzoli, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.