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Synthetic scleral reinforcement materials. III. Changes in surface and bulk physical properties
Authors:JT Jacob  JJ Lin  SP Mikal
Affiliation:Department of Opthalmology, LSU Eye Center, Louisiana State University Medical Center School of Medicine, New Orleans 70112, USA.
Abstract:Changes in the physical properties of polymer materials during implantation in the biological environment can directly affect the ultimate performance of the polymer and/or device. We implanted four types of extraocular bands (porous, solid, composite, and patched) made from 11 types of materials in rabbit eyes and examined the changes in the physical strength and polymer structure of the implanted bands in terms of tensile strength measurements, creep analysis, and attenuated total internal reflectance--Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) at intervals up to 18 months after implantation. Most of the materials showed increases in tensile strength over the first 6 months in situ in the rabbit eye, followed by significant decreases between 6 and 18 months. Polymer bands that had been implanted for 18 months generally exhibited less creep behavior than unimplanted controls; for most of the bands, creep values ranged from 0% to 10% of the original length. ATR-FTIR of the solid bands and surface coatings showed protein deposition on all of the materials examined, with silicone materials and coatings least affected. Thirty-degree ATR-FTIR scans detected significant changes in the polymer structure for two of the band types: one solid (polyether urethane) and one porous (porous polyacrylate). In general, expanded polytetrafluoroethylene was the most stable in terms of tensile strength and creep. The least stable bands (composite bands made with porous polyurethane) were those that had undergone hydrolytic and/or oxidative degradation and chain scission of the polymer or alteration of the bond between the two materials making up the composite. These changes in physical properties and polymer structure observed after 18 months of implantation support the idea that polymer implant materials should be followed closely over several years in vivo to determine their suitability prior to use in humans.
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