Print Email Facebook Twitter Bacterial adherence on 3-D printed plasma electrolytic oxidized titanium implants in dynamic conditions Title Bacterial adherence on 3-D printed plasma electrolytic oxidized titanium implants in dynamic conditions Author Frints, Ivo (TU Delft Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering; TU Delft Biomechanical Engineering) Contributor Apachitei, I. (mentor) Bevers, Raymond (mentor) Zadpoor, A.A. (mentor) van den Dobbelsteen, J.J. (graduation committee) Arts, Chris (mentor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Corporate name Delft University of Technology Programme Biomedical Engineering Date 2020-09-09 Abstract Osteoarthritis, the degeneration of articular cartilage, which causes loss of mobility and chronic pain for patients is a common condition with high clinical demand. Care of this condition currently attributes to ±1.4% of the Dutch annual health care costs, but due to the rapidly aging Dutch population a 41% increase of cases is projected over the next 20 years. Treatment for the most frequently diagnosed forms of osteoarthritis, knee and hip respectively, involves the removal of damaged tissue and placing an artificial total joint replacement (TJR), restoring partial mobility and relieving pain. Despite its success and demand, annually 10% of these treatments are affected by infections or aseptic loosening, which combined with the increase of cases and rapid development ofantibiotic-resistant bacteria requires drastic optimization. Promising strategies that allow infection prevention while assisting the bone-implant fixation arecurrently in development, with the common approach consisting of bioactive coatings which enhance the currently applied implants with these antibacterial or bone growth related capabilities. One of these methods in development is the Plasma Electrolytic Oxidation (PEO), which additionally combines morphological changes and chemical biofunctionality by incorporating bioactive elements in theimplants’ surface layer. Until now, antibacterial surfaces bearing silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) have been incorporated into the surfaces of 3D printed titanium implants by PEO but their antibacterial properties have been studied only in static conditions. This study aimed to further characterize the antibacterial effect of these implants by testing their efficacy against bacterial adherence in both dynamic and static conditions. The additive manufacturedTi-6Al-4V implants were biofunctionalized by PEO with added AgNPs at different concentrations, resulting in non-treated, PEO treated, PEO + 0.3 g/l AgNPs and PEO + 3.0 g/l AgNPs implants. These implants were characterized to relate these to previous PEO implant related studies. During this study, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) bioreactor model was adjusted to fit these PEO + AgNPs implants and test them in conditions of bacterial adherence. Robustness and bacterial adherence were optimized for this adjusted method, where despite thorough troubleshooting inconsistent behaviour was found in the bacterial concentrations in the reactor media in an illogical manner. Dynamic conditions of this reactor caused by the fluid flow were analysed by simulation, this resulted in a calculated shear stress of 0.0058 dynes/cm2, akin to the lower limit magnitude of shear stresses caused by interstitial fluid. Despite shortage of results due to the omitted inconsistent experiments combined with the lost data due to force majeure (COVID-19), a higher bacterial adherence was examined in dynamic conditions compared to static conditions. Subject Biomaterialsbacterial adhesionImplantsPEOosteoarthritisOrthopedics3D printedplasma electrolytic oxidationbiofilmInfectionBactericidalAntibiotic-Resistant Bacteriabone implantsSilver NanoparticlesbioreactorDynamic To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:9ae3d65f-8cae-424f-a4d6-13b34e293829 Embargo date 2023-09-09 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2020 Ivo Frints Files PDF IvoFrints_Thesis.pdf 6.83 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:9ae3d65f-8cae-424f-a4d6-13b34e293829/datastream/OBJ/view