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    Titanium implant functionalization with phosphate-containing polymers may favor in vivo osseointegration

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    Aim: Osseointegration of titanium implants is predictable, but can be improved via surface functionalization. Materials and Methods: 120 implants were installed in parietal bone of 12 domestic pigs and left to heal for 1 or 3 months. Five groups were defined according surface treatments: immersion in water (H2O), 10% polyphosphoric acid (PPA10), 1% phosphorylated pullulan (PPL1), 10% phosphorylated pullulan (PPL10), or 10% phosphorylated pullulan + 1 μg BMP-2 (PPL10 BMP). As primary outcome, implant osseointegration was evaluated by quantitative histology, namely peri-implant bone formation (B/T in %) and bone-to-implant contact (BIC in %) for each healing period. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test and Mann Whitney U-test with α=0.05 were performed. Results: PPL10 and PPA10 groups showed significantly higher B/T and BIC results than the control (H2O) group at 1-month (p0.05). After 3 months, no experimental group showed a significant difference compared to the control group (H2O) for both investigated parameters (B/T and BIC; p>0.05). Conclusion: Functionalizing titanium implants with inorganic or organic phosphatecontaining polymers at 10 wt% concentration may stimulate peri-implant bone formation and implant osseointegration at early healing times.status: publishe
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