Long‐term study of high‐strength hydroxyapatite/poly(L‐lactide) composite rods for the internal fixation of bone fractures: A 2–4‐year follow‐up study in rabbits

2003 
Biodegradation of hydroxyapatite (HA)/poly(L-lactide)(PLLA) composite bone implant rods was studied with the use of two types of HA particles as reinforcing fillers: uncalcined HA (u-HA) or calcined HA (c-HA). Composite rods of u-HA/PLLA and c-HA/PLLA containing 30 or 40% (w/w) HA were implanted in the distal femur of 21 rabbits, and specimens were examined by light microscopy, scanning-electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission-electron microscopy (TEM) 2–4 years later. For u-HA/PLLA, trabecular bone bonding directly onto the rod was maintained for up to 2 years. By 3 years, surface collapse had begun, and the implants were shrinking. By 4 years, they had shrunk further, with complete bone encapsulation. The u-HA particles were small and needle shaped in the peripheries, and TEM confirmed their resorption. The cross-sectional area after 4 years decreased by 23.3 ± 8.4%. The mean ratio of bony ingrowth to the initial cross-sectional area around the shrunken rods was 6.7 ± 1.3 %. The viscosity molecular weight of PLLA reduced from 2 × 105 to less than 1 × 103. Thus, most of the PLLA had released from the rods. The c-HA/PLLA implants also showed good osteoconductivity, but shrinkage and infiltration of histiocytes were less. No osteolytic or osteoarthritic changes were found. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater 66B: 539–547, 2003
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