A Common Hydration
Lubrication Based on Hydrophobically
Modified Sulfobetaine Polyurethane and Synovial Components in the
Application of Artificial Meniscus
Polyurethane (PU) has been used in clinical practice
for artificial
meniscus to alleviate the distress of patients with meniscus injury,
but the high friction of PU in synovial fluid can lead to the deterioration
of knee joints. In this work, PUs with sulfobetaine zwitterions modified
by hydrophobic chains in bulk (PU-hSBs) are synthesized to solve the
above-mentioned challenge, and the lubrication behavior and mechanism
of PU-hSBs in the aqueous solution of representative synovial components
that mimic the in vivo environment of synovial fluid to some extent
are studied. Among the above materials, PU-hSB70 can meet the low
friction of an artificial meniscus and also has appropriate tensile
modulus and low cytotoxicity. Moreover, PU-hSB70 can maintain excellent
tribological and mechanical properties after prolonged immersion and
compressive fatigue tests, which support its long-term application
in vivo. Additionally, the lubrication role of synovial components
is identified by contrasting the lubrication behavior of PU-hSBs in
deionized water after excluding the effect of the lubricant viscosity.
A formed hydration layer of noncrystal water is improved by the hydration
of the complexes of phosphatidylcholine-hyaluronic acid adsorbed onto
PU-hSB70 via hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions. However,
the presence of serum protein on PU-hSB70, which interacts hydrophobically,
has a diminishing effect on the thickness of the layer. Our results
show the potential of PU-hSB70 can be used as an artificial meniscus.
Furthermore, the lubrication chemistry and mechanism of representative
synovial components are deeply proven through hydration.