Long-term in vivo corrosion behavior, biocompatibility and bioresorption mechanism of a bioresorbable nitrided iron scaffold

[Display omitted] Pure iron as a potential bioresorbable material for bioresorbable coronary scaffold has major disadvantages of slow corrosion and bioresorption. However, so far, there are neither quantitative data of long-term in vivo corrosion nor direct experimental evidence for bioresorption of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta biomaterialia 2017-05, Vol.54, p.454-468
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Wenjiao, Qin, Li, Qi, Haiping, Zhang, Deyuan, Zhang, Gui, Gao, Runlin, Qiu, Hong, Xia, Ying, Cao, Ping, Wang, Xiang, Zheng, Wei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] Pure iron as a potential bioresorbable material for bioresorbable coronary scaffold has major disadvantages of slow corrosion and bioresorption. However, so far, there are neither quantitative data of long-term in vivo corrosion nor direct experimental evidence for bioresorption of pure iron and its alloys, which are fundamental and vital for developing novel Fe-based alloys overcoming the intrinsic drawbacks of pure iron. This work systemically investigated scaffold performance, long-term in vivo corrosion behavior and biocompatibility of a nitrided iron coronary scaffold and explored its bioresorption mechanism. It was found that the 70μm Fe-based scaffold was superior to a state of the art Co-Cr alloy stent (Xience Prime™) in terms of crossing profile, recoil and radial strength. Mass loss was 76.0±8.5wt% for the nitrided iron scaffold and 44.2±11.4wt% for the pure iron scaffold after 36months implantation in rabbit abdominal aorta (p
ISSN:1742-7061
1878-7568
DOI:10.1016/j.actbio.2017.03.020