Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive
Stainless steel wires are the standard method for sternal closure because of their strength and rigidity, the simplicity of the process, and the short healing time that results from their application. Despite this, problems still exist with sternal stability due to micromotion between the two halves...
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doaj-83166282586941deb7f50f899c8810362020-11-25T01:55:47ZengMDPI AGJournal of Functional Biomaterials2079-49832019-08-011033710.3390/jfb10030037jfb10030037Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based AdhesiveVarinder Pal Singh Sidhu0Mark R. Towler1Marcello Papini2Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, CanadaDepartment of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, CanadaDepartment of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, CanadaStainless steel wires are the standard method for sternal closure because of their strength and rigidity, the simplicity of the process, and the short healing time that results from their application. Despite this, problems still exist with sternal stability due to micromotion between the two halves of the dissected and wired sternum. Recently, a novel glass-based adhesive was developed which, in cadaveric trials and in conjunction with wiring, was shown to restrict this micromotion. However, in order to avoid complications during resternotomy, the adhesive should adhere only to the bone and not the sternal wire. In this study, sternal wires were embedded in 8 mm discs manufactured from the novel glass-based adhesive and the constructs were then incubated at 37 °C for one, seven, and 30 days. The discs were manufactured in two different thicknesses: 2 and 3 mm. Wire pull-out tests were then performed on the constructs at three different strain rates (1, 0.1, and 0.01 mm/min). No statistically significant difference in pull-out force was found regardless of incubation time, loading rate, or construct thickness. The pull-out forces recorded were consistent with static friction between the wire and adhesive, rather than the adhesion between them. Scanning electron micrographs provided further proof of this. These results indicate that the novel adhesive may be suitable for sternal fixation without complicating a potential resternotomy.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4983/10/3/37glass polyalkenoate cementsternal fixationadhesivebone cementbioactive glassstainless steel wireresternotomyfrictionmechanical interlocking |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Varinder Pal Singh Sidhu Mark R. Towler Marcello Papini |
spellingShingle |
Varinder Pal Singh Sidhu Mark R. Towler Marcello Papini Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive Journal of Functional Biomaterials glass polyalkenoate cement sternal fixation adhesive bone cement bioactive glass stainless steel wire resternotomy friction mechanical interlocking |
author_facet |
Varinder Pal Singh Sidhu Mark R. Towler Marcello Papini |
author_sort |
Varinder Pal Singh Sidhu |
title |
Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive |
title_short |
Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive |
title_full |
Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive |
title_fullStr |
Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive |
title_full_unstemmed |
Measurement of Adhesion of Sternal Wires to a Novel Bioactive Glass-Based Adhesive |
title_sort |
measurement of adhesion of sternal wires to a novel bioactive glass-based adhesive |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Journal of Functional Biomaterials |
issn |
2079-4983 |
publishDate |
2019-08-01 |
description |
Stainless steel wires are the standard method for sternal closure because of their strength and rigidity, the simplicity of the process, and the short healing time that results from their application. Despite this, problems still exist with sternal stability due to micromotion between the two halves of the dissected and wired sternum. Recently, a novel glass-based adhesive was developed which, in cadaveric trials and in conjunction with wiring, was shown to restrict this micromotion. However, in order to avoid complications during resternotomy, the adhesive should adhere only to the bone and not the sternal wire. In this study, sternal wires were embedded in 8 mm discs manufactured from the novel glass-based adhesive and the constructs were then incubated at 37 °C for one, seven, and 30 days. The discs were manufactured in two different thicknesses: 2 and 3 mm. Wire pull-out tests were then performed on the constructs at three different strain rates (1, 0.1, and 0.01 mm/min). No statistically significant difference in pull-out force was found regardless of incubation time, loading rate, or construct thickness. The pull-out forces recorded were consistent with static friction between the wire and adhesive, rather than the adhesion between them. Scanning electron micrographs provided further proof of this. These results indicate that the novel adhesive may be suitable for sternal fixation without complicating a potential resternotomy. |
topic |
glass polyalkenoate cement sternal fixation adhesive bone cement bioactive glass stainless steel wire resternotomy friction mechanical interlocking |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4983/10/3/37 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT varinderpalsinghsidhu measurementofadhesionofsternalwirestoanovelbioactiveglassbasedadhesive AT markrtowler measurementofadhesionofsternalwirestoanovelbioactiveglassbasedadhesive AT marcellopapini measurementofadhesionofsternalwirestoanovelbioactiveglassbasedadhesive |
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