Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Bone sialoprotein‐coated femoral implants are osteoinductive but mechanically compromised

Gary C. O'Toole E. Salih C. Gallagher D. FitzPatrick N. O'Higgins S. K. O'Rourke
Hip

Aseptic loosening of femoral implants in total hip replacement remains an unsolved orthopaedic problem. This paper investigates the potential role of bone sialoprotein (BSP) in enhancing bone‐implant adherence. As BSP is osteoinductive in rat calvarial models, we investigated whether BSP is similarly osteoinductive when coated onto intramedullary femoral implants.

 

BSP‐coated titanium implants were implanted into the femur of female “Wistar” rats (average weight 215 g) that were sacrificed at days 10, 20 and 30. Harvested femoral implants were subjected to pullout testing and then examined histologically.

 

BSP‐coated implants demonstrate osteoinduction when examined histologically. Plugging the femoral canal with BSP prior to inserting the implant neither increased implant pullout strengths nor further increased osteoblastic activity.

 

This study has demonstrated for the first time that BSP is osteoinductive when coated onto femoral implants and inserted into bones subjected to mechanical loading. However, we found that pullout strengths are a function of implant surface topographical characteristics and are not affected by BSP coating or histological osteoinduction.


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