NAGIOS: RODERIC FUNCIONANDO

Advances in surfaces and osseointegration in implantology. Biomimetic surfaces

Repositori DSpace/Manakin

IMPORTANT: Aquest repositori està en una versió antiga des del 3/12/2023. La nova instal.lació está en https://roderic.uv.es/

Advances in surfaces and osseointegration in implantology. Biomimetic surfaces

Mostra el registre parcial de l'element

dc.contributor.author Albertini, Matteo es
dc.contributor.author Fernandez Yagüe, Marc es
dc.contributor.author Lázaro Calvo, Pedro es
dc.contributor.author Herrero Climent, Mariano es
dc.contributor.author Ríos Santos, José Vicente es
dc.contributor.author Bullón, Pedro es
dc.contributor.author Gil Mur, Francisco Javier es
dc.date.accessioned 2015-07-06T07:21:13Z
dc.date.available 2015-07-06T07:21:13Z
dc.date.issued 2015 es
dc.identifier.citation Albertini, Matteo ; Fernandez Yagüe, Marc ; Lázaro Calvo, Pedro ; Herrero Climent, Mariano ; Ríos Santos, José Vicente ; Bullón, Pedro ; Gil Mur, Francisco Javier. Advances in surfaces and osseointegration in implantology. Biomimetic surfaces. En: Medicina oral, patología oral y cirugía bucal. Ed inglesa, 2015, Vol. 20, No. 3: 18- es
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10550/45046
dc.description.abstract The present work is a revision of the processes occurring in osseointegration of titanium dental implants according to different types of surfaces -namely, polished surfaces, rough surfaces obtained from subtraction methods, as well as the new hydroxyapatite biomimetic surfaces obtained from thermochemical processes. Hydroxyapatite’s high plasma-projection temperatures have proven to prevent the formation of crystalline apatite on the titanium dental implant, but lead to the formation of amorphous calcium phosphate (i.e., with no crystal structure) instead. This layer produce some osseointegration yet the calcium phosphate layer will eventually dissolve and leave a gap between the bone and the dental implant, thus leading to osseointegration failure due to bacterial colonization. A new surface -recently obtained by thermochemical processes- produces, by crystallization, a layer of apatite with the same mineral content as human bone that is chemically bonded to the titanium surface. Osseointegration speed was tested by means of minipigs, showing bone formation after 3 to 4 weeks, with the security that a dental implant can be loaded. This surface can be an excellent candidate for immediate or early loading procedures en_US
dc.subject Odontología es
dc.subject Ciencias de la salud es
dc.title Advances in surfaces and osseointegration in implantology. Biomimetic surfaces es
dc.type journal article es_ES
dc.subject.unesco UNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICAS es
dc.type.hasVersion VoR es_ES
dc.identifier.url http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/citart?info=link&codigo=5122595&orden=0 es

Visualització       (1.049Mb)

Aquest element apareix en la col·lecció o col·leccions següent(s)

Mostra el registre parcial de l'element

Cerca a RODERIC

Cerca avançada

Visualitza

Estadístiques