Advanced Bioactive Inorganic Materials for Bone Regeneration and Drug Delivery
Coordonnateurs : Wu Chengtie, Chang Jiang, Xiao Yin
Bioceramics play an important role in repairing and regenerating defective or damaged bone. Annually, more than 500,000 bone graft procedures are performed in the United States and approximately 2.2 million are conducted worldwide. Advanced Bioactive Inorganic Materials for Bone Regeneration and Drug Delivery reviews the latest advances in the field of bioceramics. The book summarizes innovative concepts, bioceramic design, and methods for material synthesis and drug delivery.
Offering guidance for biomedical engineering researchers and material scientists, the book explores:
- Novel mesoporous bioactive glasses and silicate-based ceramics for bone regeneration and drug delivery
- Bioactive silicate ceramics, including their mechanical properties, interaction with bone-forming cells, and in vivo osteogenesis and angiogenesis
- Silica nanospheres with a core-shell structure and their specific properties for controllable drug delivery
- The 3D-printing technique to prepare advanced bioceramic scaffolds for bone tissue engineering applications?including the preparation, mechanical strength, and biological properties of 3D-printed porous scaffolds of calcium phosphate cement and silicate bioceramics
- Biomimetic preparation and controllable crystal growth and biomineralization of bioceramics
- Inorganic and organic composite materials and their unique biological, electrical, and mechanical properties that enable the design of excellent bone regeneration and gene delivery systems
A comprehensive survey of the research progress of bioceramics and their applications in bone repair and regeneration, this volume is designed to enhance study and career development for those in this field and to facilitate further research and opportunities for new solutions.
Mesoporous Bioactive Glasses for Drug Delivery and Bone Tissue Regeneration. Silicate-Based Bioactive Ceramics for Bone Regeneration Application. Functional Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles with a Core-Shell Structure for Controllable Drug Delivery. 3D Plotting of Bioceramic Scaffolds under Physiological Conditions for Bone Tissue Engineering. Biomimetic Preparation and Biomineralization of Bioceramics. Preparation and Mechanism of Novel Bioceramics with Controllable Morphology and Crystal Growth. Bioactive Inorganic and Organic Composite Materials for Bone Regeneration and Gene Delivery. Index.
Chengtie Wu, Ph.D., works at the Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Chinese Academy of Sciences. His research focuses on advanced bioactive inorganic materials for bone tissue engineering and drug delivery application. He has published more than 80 peer-reviewed journal papers, including 12 papers in Biomaterials, the top journal in the field of biomaterials. The published papers have been cited more than 900 times. Dr. Wu has been awarded five patents and two of his technology patents have been transferred to companies.
Jiang Chang, Ph.D. Yin Xiao, Ph.D.
Date de parution : 10-2019
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 03-2013
Ouvrage de 280 p.
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes d’Advanced Bioactive Inorganic Materials for Bone... :
Mots-clés :
Bioactive Glass; Bone Tissue Engineering; MBG; Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles; HMS Nanoparticles; Composite Scaffolds; Bone Regeneration Application; CPC; Calcium Phosphate Bioceramics; ACP; SBF; Recombinant Human BMP-2; BMSCs; Drug Delivery; Tissue Engineering; Magnetic Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles; Mesoporous Silica; Silicate Ceramics; Mesoporous Silica Shell; American Chemical Society; HAp Crystal; PRF; Biphasic Scaffolds; Gene Delivery; Core Shell Structure