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Glass-ionomers: bioactive implant materials

Biomaterials, 1998
Glass-ionomer cements (GICs) originally designed for use as dental materials have a number of advantages over acrylic bone cements. These include lack of exotherm during setting, absence of monomer and improved release of incorporated therapeutic agents; this has resulted in the development of GICs for biomedical applications.
I M, Brook, P V, Hatton
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Bioactive Glasses and Glass-Ceramics

Materials Science Forum, 1998
Volume I: Bioactive Glasses and Glass-Ceramics General Science and Development Composities and Coatings Tissue and Organ Culture Studies Preclinical and Clinical Results ...
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Bioactive Glass Three Decades On

Journal of Long-Term Effects of Medical Implants, 2005
Bioglasses were first introduced in the early 1970s and since have found wide use in dentistry. The original 45S5 bioglass, as described by Hench, is a silica-based melt-derived glass characterized by a Si02 content of less than 60%, a high Na2O and CaO content, and a high CaO:P2O5 ratio.
Mark V, Thomas   +2 more
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Bioactive calcium pyrophosphate glasses and glass-ceramics

Acta Biomaterialia, 2005
Calcium phosphate glass-based materials in the pyrophosphate region are briefly reviewed. Calcium pyrophosphate glasses can be prepared by including a small amount of TiO(2) (
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Bioactive glasses entering the mainstream

Drug Discovery Today, 2018
Over the past decade, the extended research on bioactive glasses (BGs) has drastically grown because of their bioactive nature and unique ability to deliver therapeutics in tissue engineering, regenerative medicine and even cancer research. These strategies mostly rely on the inherent potential of BGs regarding bonding to the living tissues and ...
Kargozar, Saeid   +4 more
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S53P4 bioactive glass

2017
Bioactive glasses (BAGs) are synthetic bone graft substitutes that have been investigated by various orthopedic research groups in the past decades. These bone-bonding, osteoconductive materials can be used for various clinical applications. S53P4 is a specific composition of BAG, which is the main topic of this chapter, with the focus on granular ...
Hulsen, D.J.   +3 more
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Bioactive glass coatings: A review

Surface Engineering, 2011
Bioactive glasses, discovered by Hench and co-workers at the end of the 1960s, are among the most promising biomaterials for bone repair and reconstruction, mainly thanks to their high bioactivity index. Unfortunately, due to their brittleness and relatively poor mechanical properties, their clinical applications are limited to non-load bearing ...
SOLA, Antonella   +3 more
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Occlusion effects of bioactive glass and hydroxyapatite on dentinal tubules: a systematic review

Clinical Oral Investigations, 2022
Sepideh Behzadi   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Surface functionalization of bioactive glasses

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A, 2008
AbstractDifferent cleaning and silanization methods have been applied to bioactive glasses with the aim of covalently bonding bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP‐2) to the surface. Several glasses, with different bioactivity index, were cleaned with acidic, basic, or neutral aqueous media to investigate the role of pH in the formation of silanols on glass
VERNE', Enrica   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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