Can strontium replace calcium in bioactive materials for dental applications?

Lauter E. Pelepenko, Marina Angélica Marciano, Tamires Melo Francati, Gabriela F. Bombarda, Thiago B. M. Antunes, Francois Sorrentino, Richard A Martin, Elisa Boanini, Paul Cooper, Richard Shelton, Josette Camilleri

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Abstract

The substitution of calcium with strontium in bioactive materials has been promising but there has been some concern over the material instability and possible toxicity. The aim of this research was the synthesis and characterization of calcium and strontium substituted bioactive materials and assessment of interactions with local tissues and peripheral elemental migration in an animal model. A bioactive glass, hydroxyapatite and hydraulic calcium silicate with 50% or 100% calcium substitution with strontium were developed and the set materials were characterized immediately after setting and after 30 and 180-days in solution. Following subcutaneous implantation, the local (tissue histology, elemental migration) and systemic effects (elemental deposition after organ digestion) were assessed. The strontium-replaced silicate cements resulted in the synthesis of partially substituted phases and strontium leaching at all-time points. The strontium silicate implanted in the animal model could not be retrieved in over half of the specimens showing the high rate of material digestion. Tissue histology showed that all materials caused inflammation after 30 days of implantation however this subsided and angiogenesis occurred after 180 days. Strontium was not detected in the local tissues or the peripheral organs while all calcium containing materials caused calcium deposition in the kidneys. The tricalcium silicate caused elemental migration of calcium and silicon in the local tissues shown by the elemental mapping but no deposition of calcium was identified in the peripheral organs verified by the assessment of the digested tissues. Strontium can substitute calcium in bioactive materials without adverse local or systemic effects.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1892-1911
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A
Volume110
Issue number12
Early online date30 Jun 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The University of Birmingham College Fund, Dr Jianguo Liu for his assistance with the electron microscopy. The study has been funded by the University of Birmingham College fund to purchase the materials.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Keywords

  • bioactivity
  • calcium-based materials
  • elemental migration
  • strontium-doping

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