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      Phosphate and Borate Bioactive Glasses 

      Reactions of Borate Glasses in Aqueous Solutions

      edited-book
      The Royal Society of Chemistry

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          Abstract

          Borate glasses are used for a variety of biomedical applications that depend on the controlled release of species from the glass to the surrounding physiological environment. As a consequence, a detailed understanding of their dissolution processes is required to design glasses for specific applications. Under neutral, dilute conditions, borate glasses dissolve congruently at rates that decrease for compositions with greater fractions of four-coordinated borate sites and modified with metal oxides that have greater cation field strengths. These dissolution rates then can be understood by considering the concomitant hydrolysis of the borate glass network and hydration of the metal ion sites. Ca ions released from borate glasses dissolved in phosphate-solutions, including physiological environments, react with those phosphate anions to form amorphous calcium phosphates that can transform to hydroxyapatite, and in so doing, promote tissue regeneration. The mesoscopic structures of these calcium phosphate phases depend on the glass composition and the dissolution conditions.

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          Most cited references42

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          Bioceramics: From Concept to Clinic

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            Bioactive glass in tissue engineering.

            This review focuses on recent advances in the development and use of bioactive glass for tissue engineering applications. Despite its inherent brittleness, bioactive glass has several appealing characteristics as a scaffold material for bone tissue engineering. New bioactive glasses based on borate and borosilicate compositions have shown the ability to enhance new bone formation when compared to silicate bioactive glass. Borate-based bioactive glasses also have controllable degradation rates, so the degradation of the bioactive glass implant can be more closely matched to the rate of new bone formation. Bioactive glasses can be doped with trace quantities of elements such as Cu, Zn and Sr, which are known to be beneficial for healthy bone growth. In addition to the new bioactive glasses, recent advances in biomaterials processing have resulted in the creation of scaffold architectures with a range of mechanical properties suitable for the substitution of loaded as well as non-loaded bone. While bioactive glass has been extensively investigated for bone repair, there has been relatively little research on the application of bioactive glass to the repair of soft tissues. However, recent work has shown the ability of bioactive glass to promote angiogenesis, which is critical to numerous applications in tissue regeneration, such as neovascularization for bone regeneration and the healing of soft tissue wounds. Bioactive glass has also been shown to enhance neocartilage formation during in vitro culture of chondrocyte-seeded hydrogels, and to serve as a subchondral substrate for tissue-engineered osteochondral constructs. Methods used to manipulate the structure and performance of bioactive glass in these tissue engineering applications are analyzed. Copyright © 2011 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Amorphous calcium phosphates: synthesis, properties and uses in biomaterials.

              C Combes, C Rey (2010)
              This review paper on amorphous calcium phosphates (ACPs) provides an update on several aspects of these compounds which have led to many studies and some controversy since the 1970s, particularly because of the lack of irrefutable proof of the occurrence of an ACP phase in mineralised tissues of vertebrates. The various synthesis routes of ACPs with different compositions are reported and the techniques used to characterise this phase are reviewed. We focus on the various physico-chemical properties of ACPs, especially the reactivity in aqueous media, which have been exploited to prepare bioactive bone substitutes, particularly in the form of coatings and cements for orthopaedic applications and composites for dental applications. 2010 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                May 4 2022
                : 192-207
                10.1039/9781839164750-00192
                1ae9bea5-3d39-437a-9801-8ee1ec2d29a6
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