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| United States Patent | 4705694 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4705694.html |
| Inventor(s) | Buttazzoni; Bernard (Marseille, FR);
Leseur; Philippe (La Rochelle, FR);
Thebault; Jacques (Bordeaux, FR);
Constant, deceased; Georges (late of Ramonville Saint-Agne, FR) |
| Abstract | The present invention relates to a process for making bioactive coatings on
osseous prostheses, wherein a mist of particles containing calcium ions
and orthophosphate ions is made from solutions and said mist is brought
into contact with a substrate (notably an implant) made of inert material
under such operational conditions that a hydroxyapatite coating is formed
by reaction on the hot surface of said inert substrate, said process being
characterized by the fact that the operating conditions to make the
deposit are selected so that a liquid film forms on the hot surface of
said substrate during the deposition. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4705694 |
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Process for making bioactive coatings on osseous prostheses, and
prostheses thus obtained |
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| Publication Date |
November 10, 1987 |
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| Filing Date |
November 12, 1986 |
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| Parent Case |
CROSS REFERENCE
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 626,901,
filed July 2, l984, and now abandoned. |
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| Priority Data |
Jul 01, 1983[FR]83 11026 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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The present invention relates to a process for making bioactive coatings on
osseous prostheses and it also relates to the prostheses thus obtained.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,183, a process was described for the making of
bioactive coatings on osseous prostheses; this process is characterized by
the fact that a mist is made of fine droplets containing calcium ions and
orthophosphate ions and said mist is brought into contact with an implant
of inert material under conditions such that at least one calcium
phosphate is formed by reaction on the hot surface of the said implant.
Said U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,183 specified, firstly, that the implant had to be
heated to a temperature between 200.degree. and 600.degree. C. and,
secondly, in order to increase the speed of the deposition (that is, the
speed of making a deposit of adequate thickness), it was desirable to
preheat the mist by passing it through an oven at a temperature between
100.degree. and 300.degree. C. In the examples given in said application,
the preheating oven was raised to the temperature of 300.degree. C.,
100.degree. C., 200.degree. C., 280.degree. C.
Continuation of work on finalization of the process described in U.S. Pat.
No. 4,366,183 allowed determination of the optimal conditions for making
deposits. It is plain that the making of deposits under the experimental
conditions described allows the making of deposits either in accordance
with the technique of a vapor-phase deposit or in accordance with the
technique of a liquid-phase deposit; more precisely, the deposits (hence,
the phosphates formed on the substrate) can be made on a dry substrate or
on a substrate covered with a film of liquid. The examples supplied in
U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,183 seem, for reasons associated with the speed of
deposition, to advantage the making of said deposits on a dry substrate
requiring complete vaporization (or practically complete) of the droplets
of liquid that form the mist before said droplets reach the surface of the
substrate (or implant).
It has now been found, and this is the purpose of the present application,
that the deposits made by the mist technique described in U.S. Pat. No.
4,366,183, could very advantageously be made in the liquid phase, that is
by experimental conditions that always provoke a liquid film on the
surface of the substrate (or implant) during deposition.
Thanks to said liquid phase deposit, it is possible to obtain more easily
and with greater speed, bioactive calcium phosphates allowing a Ca/.sub.P
ratio higher than about 1.2 (calcium-deficient hydroxyapatites) and good
surface qualities.
The present invention relates to a process for making, on osseous
prosthesis substrates, bioactive coatings based on calcium-deficient
hydroxyapatites having a Ca/.sub.P ratio higher than 1.2, said process
comprising the steps of forming, from aqueous solutions of dibasic calcium
phosphate, a mist of droplets containing calcium ions and orthophosphate
ions and bringing said mist into contact with the substrate in an inert
material (for example an implant) appropriately heated in such conditions
that a thin solid bioactive deposit forms on the substrate from the liquid
film, which is formed in situ on said substrate.
The invention process for making bioactive coatings on osseous prostheses
substrate comprises the steps of:
(1) placing an osseous prosthesis substrate made of an inert material on a
support;
(2) heating said support to between 250.degree. and 500.degree. C.;
(3) atomizing on said substrate a saturated aqueous solution of a dibasic
calcium phosphate maintained at a temperature between 5.degree. and
30.degree. C., said solution being carried by air or by an inert atomizing
gas under the form of a mist of droplets in such conditions that, for one
cm2 of the substrate to be coated, the flow rate of the atomizing gas is
higher than 4.5 l/min and the flow rate of the solution is higher than 200
ml/hr.
In the conditions of the invention process, a continuous liquid film forms
on the hot substrate from the aqueous solution, the temperature of which
is comprised between 55.degree. and 95.degree. C., i.e. at a temperature
below its vaporisation temperature. This liquid film remains at a very low
distance from the substrate without being instantaneously vaporized due to
the steam cushion isolating the cold solution from the hot substrate.
In comparison with the process disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,183, the
invention process allows the formation of a metastable liquid film which
provides:
an excellent mobility of the chemical species (ions)
a better homogeneity of the deposited layers by homogeneity of composition
and temperature;
a greater rapidity of the chemical reactions.
Furthermore, it should be noted that the deposit speeds are 5 to 10 times
higher and that the crystallinity of the deposit is much improved.
Finally, the homogeneity of the deposit is obtained on several cm2 whereas
without liquid film said homogeneity is optimal only on a few mm2.
According to the invention process it is possible to obtain a deposit of
around 5 .mu.m for one hour.
The use of the invention process is simpler than the one of the process
disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,183, since it is not necessary to preheat
the mist of droplets. On the other hand, the droplets can be formed
conventionally by an air pneumatic atomizer, by which the said droplets
are atomized directly onto the surface of the substrate to be coated.
A consequence of the non-pre-heating of the liquid droplets and the fact
that the water must be evaporated on the surface of the substrate, is that
said substrate must be energetically heated (in other words, a sufficient
quantity of heat must be added per unit of time). It has been found, and
this constitutes another aspect of the present invention, that it is very
advantageous to heat said substrate by a method of heating by which the
heat is generated in the mass of the said substrate or in an appropriate
mass in contact with said substrate such as, for example, heating by
infrared rays, by laser or, preferably, by high-frequency induction.
The device used to implement the invention is illustrated on the single
drawing that illustrates:
an air pneumatic atomization instrument with a capilary tube 3 at which
arrives the solution to be atomized 1, an input 2 for the atomizing gas
(compressed air) that produces the spray;
a heating appliance 8 formed of a loop of a high frequency furnace;
the furnace carries a graphite support 5 placed in a reactor 9 made in a
heat-resistant material such as silica;
the substrate 6 to be coated is placed on the support 5;
the temperature of the support 5 is controlled by a thermocouple 7;
the jet 4 leaving the pneumatic atomizer is projected directly on the
surface of substrate 6.
The following non-limited examples illustrate the invention without
limiting the scope thereof.
EXAMPLE 1
Using the device described above, four deposits were made on plates (10
mm.times.20 mm), holding at 260.degree. C. the temperature of support 5
(thermocouple 7). The experimental conditions are as follows:
TABLE I
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Deposit 1a 1b 1c 1d
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Flow rate of atomizing
7.3 8.2 9 9.8
gas (air) (1/min.)
Liquid film none thick average
light
on substrate
Flow rate of solution
300 800 600 400
atomized (ml/h)
Pressure of atomizing
1.5 2 2 2
gas (kg/cm.sup.2)
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The deposits obtained have been analyzed to determine their composition;
notably, it was found that the Ca/P ratio was 1.05.+-.0.05 in conditions
1a, 1.25.+-.0.05 in conditions 1b, and 1.20.+-.0.02 in conditions 1c and
1d.
It therefore appears that the composition of the deposits is significantly
the same, whatever the thickness of the liquid film, but that said
composition is distinctly different when there is no liquid film.
Complementary tests have shown that the quality of the deposits obtained
with the liquid film was higher than that of the deposits obtained with no
liquid film.
EXAMPLE 2
An attempt was made in this example to determine the importance of the
temperature according to the invention process. It was first designed for
the purpose of finding the ratio between temperature measured in the
graphite support 5 (measured by thermocouple 7) and that measured in the
liquid film, all other factors being equal.
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Temperature in 5
Temperature in liquid film
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250 55
300 70
340 80
400 85
450 90
500 95
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A number of tests were then carried out under the following experimental
conditions (table II):
TABLE II
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Deposit 2a 2b 2c 2d 2e 2f 2g
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Temperature T
260 300 330 360 380 400 500
(.degree. C, in 5)
Flow rate of
9 9.6 9.6 9.6 9.8 9.8 10.6
atomizing gas
(air) (1/min.)
Flow rate of
600 700 700 740 800 830 950
solution atomized
(ml/h)
Pressure of atomiz-
2.0 2.0 2.1 2.1 1.9 1.9 2.3
ing gas (kg:cm.sup.2)
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It was found for all these tests that the deposit was made with a thin
layer of liquid on the substrate.
The deposits were analyzed for Ca/.sub.p giving the following value:
2a=1.20, 2b=1.25, 2c=1.28, 2d=1.37, 2e=1.27, 2f=1.38 and 2g=1.35.
Analyses by infrared spectrometry showed :
that deposits 2d, 2f and 2g had the same characteristics as
calcium-deficient apatites;
that the other deposits seemed to consist of a mixture of a
calcium-deficient apatitic phase and of a bicalcic phosphate phase.
The above experiments were all carried out with an aqueous starting
solution containing 120 mg of Ca H P0.sub.4, 2H.sub.2 0, in 1 liter of
distilled water and by pneumatically atomizing this solution with air as
atomizing gas.
The supports (or substrates) coated with deposits according to this
application proved to be particularly advantageous for the making of
osseous prostheses (articular prostheses or dental implants, for example)
on account of their ability to associate themselves tightly with the
osseous materials with which said deposits come in contact.
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Description  |
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