British and Russian surgeons rebuilding
faces of children involved in accidents have
used a new honeycombed polymeric implant. The
material bonds with the bone without causing
adverse reactions. The made-to-measure implants
are light, tough, flexible and cheap, providing
an excellent alternative to traditional titanium.
They are easier to adjust and re-shape and give
much more flexibility. These implants allow
carrying out many more operations than before.
When a child is assessed for an operation at
the St. Vladimir Children’s Hospital,
Moscow, scientists use X-rays and tomography
images to create a three-dimensional plastic
cast of the damaged area. These solid biomodels,
built by a high-tech process called laser stereolithography
allow surgeons to plan operations with great
precision before they even lift a scalpel. Having
assessed how much bone needs to be removed,
the scientists in Troitsk use stereolithography
to make the individual PolyHap implants. The
technique, which can be completed in a matter
of hours, can be used to make the most intricate
shapes that are then sent to the hospital. The
outline of the implant is initially “drawn”
by a laser beam, which leaves a very fine coating
of polymer. This process is repeated hundreds
of times until the model is complete.
Although the PolyHap implants have produced
good results there is a possibility the implants
might have to be replaced as the child grows
and the bones develop. In order to make these
‘vanishing’ implants, a new Surface
Selective Laser Sintering technique is being
developed. This involves using a laser beam
to melt just the polymer surface, leaving the
bioactive inner section intact – a crucial
factor in creating a biodegradable implant.
(The ‘PolyHap’
implants have been developed by teams led by
Professor Steve Howdle in Nottingham and Dr.
Vladimir Popov from the Institute of Laser and
Information Technology in Troitsk, near Moscow,
whose work is described in the current issue
of Advanced Materials)
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