High‐Performance Thiol–Ene Composites Unveil a New Era of Adhesives Suited for Bone Repair |
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Authors: | Viktor Granskog Sandra García‐Gallego Johanna von Kieseritzky Jennifer Rosendahl Patrik Stenlund Yuning Zhang Sarunas Petronis Benny Lyvén Marianne Arner Joakim Håkansson Michael Malkoch |
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Affiliation: | 1. KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Department of Fibre and Polymer Technology, Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Clinical Science and Education and the Department of Hand Surgery, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden;3. RISE Research Institutes of Sweden, Bioscience and Materials–Medical Device Technology, Bor?s, Sweden |
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Abstract: | The use of adhesives for fracture fixation can revolutionize the surgical procedures toward more personalized bone repairs. However, there are still no commercially available adhesive solutions mainly due to the lack of biocompatibility, poor adhesive strength, or inadequate fixation protocols. Here, a surgically realizable adhesive system capitalizing on visible light thiol–ene coupling chemistry is presented. The adhesives are carefully designed and formulated from a novel class of chemical constituents influenced by dental resin composites and self‐etch primers. Validation of the adhesive strength is conducted on wet bone substrates and accomplished via fiber‐reinforced adhesive patch (FRAP) methodology. The results unravel, for the first time, on the promise of a thiol–ene adhesive with an unprecedented shear bond strength of 9.0 MPa and that surpasses, by 55%, the commercially available acrylate dental adhesive system Clearfil SE Bond of 5.8 MPa. Preclinical validation of FRAPs on rat femur fracture models details good adhesion to the bone throughout the healing process, and are found biocompatible not giving rise to any inflammatory response. Remarkably, the FRAPs are found to withstand loads up to 70 N for 1000 cycles on porcine metacarpal fractures outperforming clinically used K‐wires and match metal plates and screw implants. |
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Keywords: | adhesives biomedical applications composites photochemistry polymeric materials |
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