5 Things You Didn’t Know About...bone-healing Nanofibres

5 things you didn’t know about...bone-healing nanofibres

5 Things You Didn’t Know About...bone-healing Nanofibres

Credit: Riitta-Leena Inki

1. They are thin-film and fibrous biomaterials with similar structures and regeneration rates to that of bone.  

2. They were developed by Jani Holopainen, a doctoral researcher in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Helsinki, Finland.

3. The hydroxyapatite fibres are produced on a needleless, twisted wire electrospinning apparatus.

4. They could be used in bone implants and as scaffolding for bone regeneration. Cellular tests have been made already, but medical application is a way off.

5. The nanofibres would be used as a scaffold on the bone fracture or fault, activating the bone cells to reproduce. As the new cells are generated the nanofibres disintegrate, meaning there would be no need for further surgery to remove the nanofibre scaffold.

Find out more about this on page 21 of the upcoming March issue of Materials World.  

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(via Reddit)

(via reddit)

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image

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image

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Sources: Wikipedia ( x | x | x | x | x | x )  images: hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu

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