| Title | Alkaline treatments to render starch based biodegradable polymers self-mineralizable |
| Publication Type | Papers in Scientific Journals |
| Year of Publication | 2007 |
| Authors | Leonor I. B., Kim H. - M., Balas F., Kawashita M., Reis R. L., Kokubo T., and Nakamura T. |
| Abstract | The present research aims to develop a new route for surface functionalization of biodegradable polymers. The method is based on a wet chemistry modification, resulting in etching and/or hydrolysis in order to increase the amount of polar groups, such as hydroxyl (-OH) and carboxylic (-COOH) groups on the surface of the polymer. The polymer used as substrate was a corn starch-ethylene vinyl alcohol biodegradable blend (SEVA-C). For that purpose it was used in two different types of activation: (a) calcium hydroxide solution [Ca(OH)(2)] and (b) sodium hydroxide solution (NaOH). These treatments lead to the formation carboxylic acid-rich SEVA-C surfaces. Then, the samples were soaked in simulated body fluid (SBF) for different time periods of time until 7 days. After 1 day in SBF, the surface of SEVA-C was fully covered with spherulite particles. As the soaking time increased, the particles increased and coalesced, leading to the formation of a dense and uniform layer. Furthermore, thin-film X-ray diffraction confirms that the layer formed on the surface of the polymer was an apatite-like layer. These results suggest that this rather simple treatment is a good method for surface functionalization and subsequent mineral nucleation and growth on biodegradable polymeric surfaces to be used for bone-related applications. Copyright (c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
| Journal | Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine |
| Volume | 1 |
| Issue | 6 |
| Pagination | 425-435 |
| Date Published | 2007-01-08 |
| Publisher | Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J |
| DOI | 10.1002/term.54 |
| URL | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/term.54/abstract |
| Keywords | apatite, bioactivity, biodegradable polymer, functional groups, simulated body fluid (SBF), starch-based polymers |
| Rights | restrictedAccess |
| Peer reviewed | yes |
| Status | published |