Nanocrystalline
Cellulose Improves the Biocompatibility and Reduces the Wear Debris
of Ultrahigh Molecular Weight Polyethylene via Weak
Binding
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Version 1 2016-02-11, 16:02Version 1 2016-02-11, 16:02
Posted on 2016-01-26 - 00:00
The
doping of biocompatible nanomaterials into ultrahigh molecular weight
polyethylene (UHMWPE) to improve the biocompatibility and reduce the
wear debris is of great significance to prolonging implantation time
of UHMWPE as the bearing material for artificial joints. This study
shows that UHMWPE can form a composite with nanocrystalline cellulose
(NCC, a hydrophilic nanosized material with a high aspect ratio) by
ball-milling and hot-pressing. Compared to pure UHMWPE, the NCC/UHMWPE
composite exhibits improved tribological characteristics with reduced
generation of wear debris. The underlying mechanism is related to
the weak binding between hydrophilic NCC and hydrophobic UHMWPE. The
hydrophilic, rigid NCC particles tend to detach from the UHMWPE surface
during friction, which could move with the rubbing surface, serve
as a thin lubricant layer, and protect the UHMWPE substrate from abrasion.
The biological safety of the NCC/UHMWPE composite, as tested by MC3T3-E1
preosteoblast cells and macrophage RAW264.7 cells, is high, with significantly
lower inflammatory responses/cytotoxicity than pure UHMWPE. The NCC/UHMWPE
composite therefore could be a promising alternative to the current
UHMWPE for bearing applications.
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Wang, Shiwen; Feng, Qiang; Sun, Jiashu; Gao, Feng; Fan, Wei; Zhang, Zhong; et al. (2016). Nanocrystalline
Cellulose Improves the Biocompatibility and Reduces the Wear Debris
of Ultrahigh Molecular Weight Polyethylene via Weak
Binding. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5b04393