Eat your heart out, Wolverine. The X-Men superhero won't be the only one with metal fused into his skeleton if a new titanium foam proves suitable for replacing and strengthening damaged bones.
Bone implants are typically made of solid metal – usually titanium. Though well tolerated by the body, such implants are significantly stiffer than bone.
This means that an implant may end up carrying a far higher load than the bone it is placed next to, according to Peter Quadbeck of the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Technology and Advanced Materials Research in Dresden, Germany. In a worst-case scenario, the decrease in stress placed on the bone means it will deteriorate, while the implant loosens and needs to be replaced.
Spongy inspiration
Now Quadbeck and colleagues have created a titanium implant with a foam-like structure, inspired by the spongy nature of bone. The titanium foam does a better job than solid metal when it comes to matching the mechanical properties of bone, such as flexibility, and this encourages more effective bone regrowth.
What's more, the foam is porous, so the bone can grow around and within it, truly integrating the implant with the skeleton.
The titanium foam is made by saturating polyurethane foam with a solution of titanium powder and binding agents. The titanium clings to the polyurethane matrix, which is then vaporised away along with the binding agents. This results in a titanium lattice which is finally heat-treated to harden it.
Though the foam has yet to be approved for use in humans, Quadbeck and colleagues are now working with physicians to explore its suitability for treating certain injuries.
Peter Lee of the Department of Materials at Imperial College London is impressed. He says there are applications where inserting one of these titanium foams "looks like the most promising solution", such as bridging long gaps between broken bones.
Yuyuan Zhao, a materials engineer at the University of Liverpool, UK, adds that "if human bone isn't good enough, an implant could give your body better performance" than leaving bone to heal naturally or using other types of implant.
Cool!
ReplyDeleteSupp
interesting..
ReplyDeleteWow, this is seriously interesting: Love your blog man, one of the few that has actually awesome content
ReplyDeletewow! cool news!
ReplyDeletehooooly shit , thats pretty amazing!
ReplyDeletekiller!
ReplyDeleteThat's crazy! I totally would want Titanium infused bones.
ReplyDeleteThat's pretty interesting.
ReplyDeletewow... with titanium foam, I can make... incredibly strong beer!
ReplyDeletegot tam i want summa them wolverine claw things
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haha im using titanium foams!
ReplyDeleteooh cool :)
ReplyDeleteWow... Thats amazing, mate. Just amazing. I have literally dreamed of this day coming. I demand that your next article be about the regeneration elixer. Halloween is coming up soon, and I'm not half-assing Wolverine.
ReplyDelete-JKane
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ReplyDeletegod that's so epic, makes me feel like breaking all my bones
ReplyDeletehaha no fan of wolverine :(
ReplyDeletethis makes me wish ill break a bone sometime soon haha
ReplyDeleteCome at me bro. Awesome blog name.
ReplyDeleteCome at ME!
http://bicyclesandwich.blogspot.com/
Awesome!
ReplyDeleteWe are one step closer to being cyborgs \o/
ReplyDeletegreat film! ^^
ReplyDeleteTitanium bones are neat, but I want the regenerative power the most.
ReplyDeletelooking forward to the next update...
ReplyDeleteVery cool!!
ReplyDeleteYup, totally the next purchase i am making!
ReplyDeletethat's pretty cool
ReplyDeletei want!!!!
ReplyDeleteThe gap between scifi and reality closes a bit more everyday
ReplyDeleteThat is so awesome!
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking of getting metal legs, I hear it's a risky operation but it would totally be worth it. LOL
ReplyDeletewow interesting
ReplyDeleteinteresting.
ReplyDeleteNow, if We could figure out Wolverines regenerative powers.
ReplyDeleteAmazing. I wonder what kind of applications this will have in robotics. I know some people that work in biomimetics and their big problem is always weight.
ReplyDeleteSo if the bone through the titanium foam, will the resulting infusion be stronger than the bone itself?
ReplyDeleteCould this have elective applications for high-risk individuals? Individuals such as the elderly?
My dad have had 3 operations, and has titanium implants xDDDD
ReplyDeleteWonder where I'd want titanium foam in my body...
ReplyDeleteas someone who has a considerable amount of implants, this is awesome news to me.
ReplyDeleteStopping in just to say, from one blogger to another, that your blog is awesome!
Do want! :p
ReplyDeleteWow great info
ReplyDeletehaving titanium bones? Man, that would be wicked!
ReplyDeleteLOL wut? their actually gonna do this? oh scientists....
ReplyDeletevery cool indeed, if not exactly like wolverine, got me all excited
ReplyDeletesounds cool
ReplyDeleteVery interesting.....
ReplyDelete