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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 129 - 129
1 Mar 2013
McEntire BJ Lakshminarayanan A Bal BS Webster T Ercan B Gorth D
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Objective

Superior bone ingrowth and resistance to bacterial infection are ideal for orthopaedic implants. We compared new bone formation, strength of bone bonding, and infection rates between silicon nitride ceramic (Si3N4; abbreviated SiN), medical-grade PEEK (PEEK), and titanium (Ti) in rat calvariae. PEEK and Ti are used in spinal and arthroplasty implants respectively, while SiN is a non-oxide ceramic used in spinal implants for the past 4 years.

Methods

Specimens of 10 mm × 10 mm by 1.75 mm size were implanted into experimental calvarial defects in 2-year old Wistar rats using standard surgical techniques (n's: SiN=48; PEEK=24; Ti=24). One group of animals was immediately inoculated with 1 × 104 Staphylococcus epidermidis; control animals received saline only. After sacrifice at 3 days, 7 days, 14 days, and 3 months post-inoculation (n=4 rats per time period), one calvarial sample each for PEEK and Ti, and two samples for SiN (per bacterial condition and time point) were retrieved for histology; remaining samples were used for sample push-out testing with a Micro Tester 5848 (Instron) with a 1-kN load cell, using published techniques. New bone formation was measured with tetracycline double-labeling at 11 and 4 days before the 14-day and 3-month time periods.