Search OsseoTECH
OsseoTECH - Chronicling Osseointegration Developments


Weekly Update                

Features
Welcome to OsseoTECH, a site devoted to chronicling osseointegration developments Please send suggestions for features.


Sponsors
Links
CDE-Directory - A Comprehensive Guide to Continuing Dental Education
OsseoNews - The World of Implant Dentistry Online
PalmDMD - PDA's in clinical dentistry
Medgadget - Emerging Medical Technologies
PalmDDS - PDA's in clinical dentistry
CurrentJournals - Keeping you updated Automatically - Keywords, Journals, Authors delivered weekly in an easy to read PDF format
Nanoparticles Aid Bone Growth 

Posted by:Editor on Monday July 7th, 2008  

Bioengineers and bioscientists at Rice University and Radboud University in Nijmegen, Netherlands, have shown they can grow denser bone tissue by sprinkling stick-like nanoparticles throughout the porous material used to pattern the bone. To grow new bone, tissue engineers typically place bone cells on porous, biodegradable materials called scaffolds, which act as patterns. With the right chemical and physical cues, the cells can be coaxed into producing new bone. As the scaffold degrades, it is replaced by new bone. "Ideally, a scaffold should be highly porous, nontoxic and biodegradable, yet strong enough to bear the structural load of the bone that will eventually replace it," said lead researcher Antonios Mikos, Rice`s J.W. Cox Professor in Bioengineering, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and the director of Rice`s Center for Excellence in Tissue Engineering. "Previous research has shown that carbon nanotubes give added strength to polymer scaffolds, but this is the first study to examine the performance of these materials in an animal model."

More

<<< Back      E-Mail This     Topic: Research

! There are no comments posted for this item yet.
Leave a Comment
Name (required)
E-Mail (will not be published)
Validation Code Validation Code (required)

 

(c) 2005-2008 Boabab Publishing Inc.

     Terms of Use     |     Privacy Notice     |     Advertise with us

All trademarks are properties of their respective holders.