Bio and Functional Materials
Bio and Functional Materials
Materials
Definition
Physical Requirements
Hard Materials.
Flexible Material.
Chemical Requirements
Must not react with any tissue in the
body.
Must be non-toxic to the body.
Long-term replacement must not be
biodegradable.
Biocompatibility is defined as the property of being biologically compatible by not
producing a toxic, injurious, or immunological response in living tissue. The human
body has an extraordinary ability to be able to tell whether an object is foreign or
not. This is part of the bodies protection against invasion from an outside
organism.
If a substance is placed in the body and the body can tell it is foreign, then an
immune system response will be generated. When an object is incorporated into
the body without any immune responses it is said to be BIOCOMPATIBLE. In order
for a device to be biocompatible, it must follow a very stringent set of demands
from the body.
The device must be very strong so it does not break inside the body. Depending on
the circumstances, it may need to be either very hard or very flexible. Anything
placed into the body must be able to take a constant physical beating from one's
body. For instance, the valves in a heart open and close about 70 - 80 times a
minute. Over the course of years and years this adds up to millions of pumps. If
the artificial valve cannot meet these standards and fails, the person will die.
History
glass eye
Bionic eye
Orthopedic Bone
screws/fixation replacements
Heart
valves
Metals Synthetic Ceramics
BIOMATERIALS
Semiconductor
Materials Biosensors
Implantable
Microelectrodes
Biomaterial Science
Evolution of Biomaterial Science
& Technology
• 1st generation (since 1950s)
Goal: Bioinertness
• 2nd generation (since 1980s)
Goal: Bioactivity
• 3rd generation (since 2000s)
Goal: Regenerate functional tissue
First Generation
Biomaterials
Degeneration of Tissue.
Mechanical Failure.
Postoperative infection.
Induction of blood clots.
Artificial Tissue
Biodegradable
Polymer Result of
Condensation of
Lactic Acid and
Glycolyic Acid
Dental Implants
Must Be Flexible.
Designed With Open
Porous Structure.
Often Recognized By
Body As Foreign.
Porous.
Permeable. *refers to the tendency
Good structure retention. of a material in contact
with the blood to
Adequate burst strength. produce a thrombus,
High fatigue resistance. or clot
Low thrombogenicity*.
Good handling properties.
Biostable.
Hip-Replacements
Hypersensitivity
is a set of undesirable reactions produced by the normal immune
system, including allergies and autoimmunity.
Systemic Effects (means affecting the entire body)
What are some of the
Challenges?
in vitro:
acceptance.
biological processes or reactions happening outside the body in
artificial conditions, often in a test tube
Biomaterials –
An Emerging Industry