Litcius/Paper detail

Piezoelectric Biocomposites for Bone Grafting in Dentistry

Cristina Rodica Dumitrescu, Ionela Andreea Neacșu, Roxana Truşcă, Roxana Cristina Popescu, Iuliana Răut, Mariana Constantin, Ecaterina Andronescu

2023Polymers15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this research, Hydroxyapatite—Potassium, Sodium Niobate—Chitosan (HA-KNN-CSL) biocomposites were synthesized, both as hydrogel and ultra-porous scaffolds, to offer two commonly used alternatives to biomaterials in dental clinical practice. The biocomposites were obtained by varying the content of low deacetylated chitosan as matrix phase, mesoporous hydroxyapatite nano-powder, and potassium–sodium niobate (K0.47Na0.53NbO3) sub-micron-sized powder. The resulting materials were characterized from physical, morpho-structural, and in vitro biological points of view. The porous scaffolds were obtained by freeze-drying the composite hydrogels and had a specific surface area of 18.4—24 m2/g and a strong ability to retain fluid. Chitosan degradation was studied for 7 and 28 days of immersion in simulated body fluid without enzymatic presence. All synthesized compositions proved to be biocompatible in contact with osteoblast-like MG-63 cells and showed antibacterial effects. The best antibacterial effect was shown by the 10HA-90KNN-CSL hydrogel composition against Staphylococcus aureus and the fungal strain Candida albicans, while a weaker effect was observed for the dry scaffold.

Topics & Concepts

ChitosanMaterials scienceSimulated body fluidSelf-healing hydrogelsBiocompositePorosityChemical engineeringComposite numberMesoporous materialNanocompositeComposite materialNuclear chemistryChemistryScanning electron microscopePolymer chemistryOrganic chemistryCatalysisEngineeringBone Tissue Engineering Materials3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications