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Relevant Aspects of Titanium Topography for Osteoblastic Adhesion and Inhibition of Bacterial Colonization

Authors :
Raquel Rodriguez-González
Loreto Monsalve-Guil
Alvaro Jimenez-Guerra
Eugenio Velasco-Ortega
Jesus Moreno-Muñoz
Enrique Nuñez-Marquez
Roman A. Pérez
Javier Gil
Ivan Ortiz-Garcia
Source :
Materials; Volume 16; Issue 9; Pages: 3553
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

The influence of the surface topography of dental implants has been studied to optimize titanium surfaces in order to improve osseointegration. Different techniques can be used to obtain rough titanium, however, their effect on wettability, surface energy, as well as bacterial and cell adhesion and differentiation has not been studied deeply. Two-hundred disks made of grade 4 titanium were subjected to different treatments: machined titanium (MACH), acid-attacked titanium (AE), titanium sprayed with abrasive alumina particles under pressure (GBLAST), and titanium that has been treated with GBLAST and then subjected to AE (GBLAST + AE). The roughness of the different treatments was determined by confocal microscopy, and the wettability was determined by the sessile drop technique; then, the surface energy of each treatment was calculated. Osteoblast-like cells (SaOs-2) were cultured, and alkaline phosphatase was determined using a colorimetric test. Likewise, bacterial strains S. gordonii, S. oralis, A. viscosus, and E. faecalis were cultured, and proliferation on the different surfaces was determined. It could be observed that the roughness of the GBLAST and GBLAS + AE was higher, at 1.99 and 2.13 μm of Ra, with respect to the AE and MACH samples, which were 0.35 and 0.20 μm, respectively. The abrasive treated surfaces showed lower hydrophilicity but lower surface energy. Significant differences could be seen at 21 days between SaOS-2 osteoblastic cell adhesion for the blasted ones and higher osteocalcin levels. However, no significant differences in terms of bacterial proliferation were observed between the four surfaces studied, demonstrating the insensitivity of bacteria to topography. These results may help in the search for the best topographies for osteoblast behavior and for the inhibition of bacterial colonization. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Details

ISSN :
19961944
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0349a415d345b79ccc1b100ad752360
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16093553