Effects of titanium surface topography on bone integration: a systematic review
Malmö University · University of Gothenburg
Abstract
To analyse possible effects of titanium surface topography on bone integration.
Our analyses were centred on a PubMed search that identified 1184 publications of assumed relevance; of those, 1064 had to be disregarded because they did not accurately present in vivo data on bone response to surface topography. The remaining 120 papers were read and analysed, after removal of an additional 20 papers that mainly dealt with CaP-coated and Zr implants; 100 papers remained and formed the basis for this paper. The bone response to differently configurated surfaces was mainly evaluated by histomorphometry (bone-to-implant contact), removal torque and pushout/pullout tests. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: A huge number of the experimental investigations have demonstrated that the bone response was influenced by the implant surface topography; smooth (S(a)1-2 microm) surfaces showed stronger bone responses than rough (S(a)>2 microm) in some studies. One limitation was that it was difficult to compare many studies because of the varying quality of surface evaluations; a surface termed 'rough' in one study was not uncommonly referred to as 'smooth' in another; many investigators falsely assumed that surface preparation per se identified the roughness of the implant; and many other studies used only qualitative techniques such as SEM. Furthermore, filtering techniques differed or only height parameters (S(a), R(a)) were reported.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 114
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Titanium
- Surface roughness
- Implant
- Surface finish
- Rough surface
- Surface (topology)
- Materials science
- Osseointegration