News From the Field Nanotextured Implant Materials: Blending in, Not Fighting Back
April 9, 2007
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Texture turns out to be nearly as important as chemistry when designing materials for use in the human body. In two related experiments, Brown University engineers Thomas Webster and Karen Haberstroh found that cells responded differently to materials with identical chemistry but different surface textures. On both titanium and polymer materials, nanoscale surface textures yielded a more natural, accepting response, while microscale patterns spurred a rejection response.
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Source Brown University
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