Biomechanical behavior of bone scaffolds made of additive manufactured tricalciumphosphate and titanium alloy under different loading conditions

J Appl Biomater Funct Mater. 2013 Dec 16;11(3):e159-66. doi: 10.5301/JABFM.2013.10832.

Abstract

Purpose: The repair of large segmental bone defects caused by fracture, tumor or infection remains challenging in orthopedic surgery. The capability of two different bone scaffold materials, sintered tricalciumphosphate and a titanium alloy (Ti6Al4V), were determined by mechanical and biomechanical testing.

Methods: All scaffolds were fabricated by means of additive manufacturing techniques with identical design and controlled pore geometry. Small-sized sintered TCP scaffolds (10 mm diameter, 21 mm length) were fabricated as dense and open-porous samples and tested in an axial loading procedure. Material properties for titanium alloy were determined by using both tensile (dense) and compressive test samples (open-porous). Furthermore, large-sized open-porous TCP and titanium alloy scaffolds (30 mm in height and diameter, 700 µm pore size) were tested in a biomechanical setup simulating a large segmental bone defect using a composite femur stabilized with an osteosynthesis plate. Static physiologic loads (1.9 kN) were applied within these tests.

Results: Ultimate compressive strength of the TCP samples was 11.2 ± 0.7 MPa and 2.2 ± 0.3 MPa, respectively, for the dense and the open-porous samples. Tensile strength and ultimate compressive strength was 909.8 ± 4.9 MPa and 183.3 ± 3.7 MPa, respectively, for the dense and the open-porous titanium alloy samples. Furthermore, the biomechanical results showed good mechanical stability for the titanium alloy scaffolds. TCP scaffolds failed at 30% of the maximum load.

Conclusions: Based on recent data, the 3D printed TCP scaffolds tested cannot currently be recommended for high load-bearing situations. Scaffolds made of titanium could be optimized by adapting the biomechanical requirements.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Alloys
  • Bone Substitutes / chemistry*
  • Calcium Phosphates / chemistry*
  • Compressive Strength
  • Computer-Aided Design
  • Elastic Modulus
  • Humans
  • Materials Testing
  • Tensile Strength
  • Tissue Scaffolds*
  • Titanium / chemistry*

Substances

  • Alloys
  • Bone Substitutes
  • Calcium Phosphates
  • titanium alloy (TiAl6V4)
  • Titanium
  • tricalcium phosphate