I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Begum
Okutan
,
Uwe Y.
Schwarze
,
Hansjörg
Habisch
,
Kamila
Iskhakova
,
Hanna
Cwieka
,
Cláudia
Ribeiro-Machado
,
Julian
Moosmann
,
Clement
Blanchet
,
Iva
Brcic
,
Susana G.
Santos
,
Tobias
Madl
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
,
Annelie M.
Weinberg
,
D. C. Florian
Wieland
,
Nicole G.
Sommer
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25485]
Open Access
Abstract: Magnesium (Mg)-based implants have become an attractive alternative to conventional permanent implants in the orthopedic field. While biocompatibility, degradation kinetics, and osseointegration of Mg-based implants have been mostly investigated, the impact of degradation products on bone remodeling and potential systemic effects remains unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the early and mid-term local and systemic tissue responses of degrading ultrahigh-purity ZX00 (Mg–Zn–Ca alloy) and ultrahigh-purity Mg (XHP-Mg) pins in a juvenile healthy rat model. The potential differences between implant types (degradable vs. permanent), implantation, and age-related changes were investigated using titanium (Ti), sham-operated, and control groups (non-intervention), respectively. Degradation products of ZX00 and XHP-Mg pins promote osteogenesis in the medullary cavity by upregulating the expression levels of Bmp2 and Opg within 14 days post-surgery. The higher degradation rate of XHP-Mg resulted in the accumulation of degradation products starting from day 3 and upregulation of different genes, particularly Ccl2 and Cepbp. Besides good osseointegration and new bone tissue formation, we found a more parallel hydroxyapatite/collagen orientation along Mg-based pins in the perimeter region compared to Ti pins. In the liver, reduced glycogen levels in Mg-based pins indicated that degradation products promote glycogenolysis, while only the ZX00 group showed a higher serum glucagon level on day 14. Results suggest that degrading ZX00 and XHP-Mg pins stimulate osteogenesis mainly via Bmp2 and Opg and promote glycogenolysis in the liver, while the higher degradation rate of XHP-Mg pins resulted in upregulation of different genes and metabolites.
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Feb 2025
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
I14-Hard X-ray Nanoprobe
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Kamila
Iskhakova
,
Hanna
Cwieka
,
Svenja
Meers
,
Heike
Helmholz
,
Anton
Davydok
,
Malte
Storm
,
Ivo Matteo
Baltruschat
,
Silvia
Galli
,
Daniel
Pröfrock
,
Olga
Will
,
Mirko
Gerle
,
Timo
Damm
,
Sandra
Sefa
,
Weilue
He
,
Keith
Macrenaris
,
Malte
Soujon
,
Felix
Beckmann
,
Julian
Moosmann
,
Thomas
O'Hallaran
,
Roger J.
Guillory
,
D. C. Florian
Wieland
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
,
Regine
Willumeit-Römer
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25078]
Open Access
Abstract: Magnesium (Mg) – based alloys are becoming attractive materials for medical applications as temporary bone implants for support of fracture healing, e.g. as a suture anchor. Due to their mechanical properties and biocompatibility, they may replace titanium or stainless-steel implants, commonly used in orthopedic field. Nevertheless, patient safety has to be assured by finding a long-term balance between metal degradation, osseointegration, bone ultrastructure adaptation and element distribution in organs. In order to determine the implant behavior and its influence on bone and tissues, we investigated two Mg alloys with gadolinium contents of 5 and 10 wt percent in comparison to permanent materials titanium and polyether ether ketone. The implants were present in rat tibia for 10, 20 and 32 weeks before sacrifice of the animal. Synchrotron radiation-based micro computed tomography enables the distinction of features like residual metal, degradation layer and bone structure. Additionally, X-ray diffraction and X-ray fluorescence yield information on parameters describing the bone ultrastructure and elemental composition at the bone-to-implant interface. Finally, with element specific mass spectrometry, the elements and their accumulation in the main organs and tissues are traced. The results show that Mg-xGd implants degrade in vivo under the formation of a stable degradation layer with bone remodeling similar to that of Ti after 10 weeks. No accumulation of Mg and Gd was observed in selected organs, except for the interfacial bone after 8 months of healing. Thus, we confirm that Mg-5Gd and Mg-10Gd are suitable material choices for bone implants.
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Nov 2024
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I22-Small angle scattering & Diffraction
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Heithem
Ben Amara
,
Diana C.
Martinez
,
Kamila
Iskhakova
,
Lena
Emanuelsson
,
Birgitta
Norlindh
,
Anna
Johansson Loo
,
D. C. Florian
Wieland
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
,
Regine
Willumeit-Römer
,
Tomasz
Plocinski
,
Wojciech
Swieszkowski
,
Furqan A.
Shah
,
Anders
Palmquist
,
Omar
Omar
,
Peter
Thomsen
Open Access
Abstract: Orthopedic implants made of biodegradable magnesium (Mg) provide an alternative to nondegradable implants for fracture repair. Widely reported to be pro-osteogenic, Mg implants are also believed to be anti-inflammatory and anti-osteoclastic, but this is difficult to reconcile with the early clinical inflammation observed around these implants. Here, by surveying implant healing in a rat bone model, we determined the cellular responses and structural assembly of bone correlated with the surface changes of Mg implants inherent in degradation. We show that, compared to titanium, both high-purity (99.998%) and clinical-grade, rare earth-alloyed (MgYREZr) Mg implants create an initial, transient proinflammatory environment that facilitates inducible nitric oxide synthase-mediated macrophage polarization, osteoclastogenesis, and neoangiogenesis programs. While this immunomodulation subsequently reinforces reparative osteogenesis at the surface of both Mg implants, the faster degradation of high-purity Mg implants, but not MgYREZr implants, elicits a compositional alteration in the interfacial bone and a previously unknown proadipogenic response with persistent low-grade inflammation in the surrounding bone marrow. Beyond the need for rigorous tailoring of Mg implants, these data highlight the need to closely monitor osseointegration not only at the immediate implant surface but also in the peri-implant bone and adjacent bone marrow.
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Aug 2024
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I22-Small angle scattering & Diffraction
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Kamila
Iskhakova
,
D. C. Florian
Wieland
,
Romy
Marek
,
Uwe Y.
Schwarze
,
Anton
Davydok
,
Hanna
Cwieka
,
Tamadur
Albaraghtheh
,
Jan
Reimers
,
Birte
Hindenlang
,
Sandra
Sefa
,
André
Lopes Marinho
,
Regine
Willumeit-Römer
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[28881]
Open Access
Abstract: Magnesium alloys are some of the most convenient biodegradable materials for bone fracture treatment due to their tailorable degradation rate, biocompatibility, and mechanical properties resembling those of bone. Despite the fact that magnesium-based implants and ZX00 (Mg-0.45Zn-0.45Ca in wt.%), in particular, have been shown to have suitable degradation rates and good osseointegration, knowledge gaps remain in our understanding of the impact of their degradation properties on the bone’s ultrastructure. Bone is a hierarchically structured material, where not only the microstructure but also the ultrastructure are important as properties like the local mechanical response are determined by it. This study presents the first comparative analysis of bone ultrastructure parameters with high spatial resolution around ZX00 and Ti implants after 6, 12, and 24 weeks of healing. The mineralization was investigated, revealing a significant decrease in the lattice spacing of the (002) Bragg’s peak closer to the ZX00 implant in comparison to Ti, while no significant difference in the crystallite size was observed. The hydroxyapatite platelet thickness and osteon density demonstrated a decrease closer to the ZX00 implant interface. Correlative indentation and strain maps obtained by scanning X-ray diffraction measurements revealed a higher stiffness and faster mechanical adaptation of the bone surrounding Ti implants as compared to the ZX00 ones. Thus, the results suggest the incorporation of Mg2+ ions into the bone ultrastructure, as well as a lower degree of remodeling and stiffness of the bone in the presence of ZX00 implants than Ti.
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Jul 2024
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Nicole
Sommer
,
Daniela
Hirzberger
,
Lisa
Paar
,
Leopold
Berger
,
Hanna
Cwieka
,
Uwe Y.
Schwarze
,
Valentin
Herber
,
Begum
Okutan
,
Andrew J.
Bodey
,
Regine
Willumeit-Römer
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
,
Jörg F.
Löffler
,
Annelie M.
Weinberg
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[25485]
Open Access
Abstract: Implant removal is unnecessary for biodegradable magnesium (Mg)-based implants and, therefore, the related risk for implant-induced fractures is limited. Aging, on the other hand, is associated with low bone-turnover and decreased bone mass and density, and thus increased fracture risk. Osteoporosis is accompanied by Mg deficiency, therefore, we hypothesized that Mg-based implants may support bone formation by Mg2+ ion release in an ovariectomy-induced osteoporotic rat model. Hence, we investigated osseointegration and implant degradation of a low-alloyed, degrading Mg–Zn–Ca implant (ZX00) in ovariectomy-induced osteoporotic (Osteo), old healthy (OH), and juvenile healthy (JH) groups of female Sprague Dawley rats via in vivo micro-computed tomography (µCT). For the Osteo rats, we demonstrate diminished trabecular bone already after 8 weeks upon ovariectomy and significantly enhanced implant volume loss, with correspondingly pronounced gas formation, compared to the OH and JH groups. Sclerotic rim development was observed in about half of the osteoporotic rats, suggesting a prevention from foreign-body and osteonecrosis development. Synchrotron radiation-based µCT confirmed lower bone volume fractions in the Osteo group compared to the OH and JH groups. Qualitative histological analysis additionally visualized the enhanced implant degradation in the Osteo group. To date, ZX00 provides an interesting implant material for young and older healthy patients, but it may not be of advantage in pharmacologically untreated osteoporotic conditions.
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May 2022
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22346]
Open Access
Abstract: Friction surfacing is an emerging solid-state coating technology based on frictional heat induced plastic deformation at the tip of a consumable metallic stud that allows to deposit layers with a fine-grained recrystallized microstructure at temperatures below the melting point. The generation of sound, defect-free metallurgical joints between multiple adjacent overlapping friction surfacing deposits, also referred to as multi-track friction surfacing, from dissimilar aluminum alloys is the focus of this experimental work. An extensive volumetric defect analysis is carried out for various overlap configurations, including post-processing strategies in order to assess the inter-track bonding integrity using microscopic characterization techniques and micro-computed tomography. The effect of layer arrangement and overlap distance on the volumetric defect formation in both inter-track and layer-to-substrate interface is quantified and discussed. Post-processing via hybrid friction diffusion bonding process demonstrates a significant reduction in defect volume ratio, proving higher material efficiency. The gained knowledge was used to successfully build a multi-track multi-layer friction surfacing stack, demonstrating the suitability of this process for large-scale additive manufacturing components. The subsequent mechanical analysis reveals excellent homogeneous isotropic tensile properties of the additive structure in the range of the base material tensile strength.
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May 2022
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22346, 21697]
Open Access
Abstract: Magnesium is attractive for the application as a temporary bone implant due to its inherent biodegradability, non-toxicity and suitable mechanical properties. The degradation process of magnesium in physiological environments is complex and is thought to be a diffusion-limited transport problem. We use a multi-scale imaging approach using micro computed tomography and transmission X-ray microscopy (TXM) at resolutions below 40 nm. Thus, we are able to evaluate the nanoporosity of the degradation layer and infer its impact on the degradation process of pure magnesium in two physiological solutions. Magnesium samples were degraded in simulated body fluid (SBF) or Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) for one to four weeks. TXM reveals the three-dimensional interconnected pore network within the degradation layer for both solutions. The pore network morphology and degradation layer composition are similar for all samples. By contrast, the degradation layer thickness in samples degraded in SBF was significantly higher and more inhomogeneous than in DMEM+10%FBS. Distinct features could be observed within the degradation layer of samples degraded in SBF, suggesting the formation of microgalvanic cells, which are not present in samples degraded in DMEM+10%FBS. The results suggest that the nanoporosity of the degradation layer and the resulting ion diffusion processes therein have a limited influence on the overall degradation process. This indicates that the influence of organic components on the dampening of the degradation rate by the suppression of microgalvanic degradation is much greater in the present study.
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Dec 2021
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22346]
Open Access
Abstract: Highly accurate segmentation of large 3D volumes is a demanding task. Challenging applications like the segmentation of synchrotron radiation microtomograms (SRμCT) at high-resolution, which suffer from low contrast, high spatial variability and measurement artifacts, readily exceed the capacities of conventional segmentation methods, including the manual segmentation by human experts. The quantitative characterization of the osseointegration and spatio-temporal biodegradation process of bone implants requires reliable, and very precise segmentation. We investigated the scaling of 2D U-net for high resolution grayscale volumes by three crucial model hyper-parameters (i.e., the model width, depth, and input size). To leverage the 3D information of high-resolution SRμCT, common three axes prediction fusing is extended, investigating the effect of adding more than three axes prediction. In a systematic evaluation we compare the performance of scaling the U-net by intersection over union (IoU) and quantitative measurements of osseointegration and degradation parameters. Overall, we observe that a compound scaling of the U-net and multi-axes prediction fusing with soft voting yields the highest IoU for the class “degradation layer”. Finally, the quantitative analysis showed that the parameters calculated with model segmentation deviated less from the high quality results than those obtained by a semi-automatic segmentation method.
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Dec 2021
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Birte
Hindenlang
,
Anna
Gapeeva
,
Martina J.
Baum
,
Sören
Kaps
,
Lena M.
Saure
,
Florian
Rasch
,
Jorg
Hammel
,
Julian
Moosmann
,
Malte
Storm
,
Rainer
Adelung
,
Fabian
Schütt
,
Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[19205]
Open Access
Abstract: Tetrapodal zinc oxide (t-ZnO) is used to fabricate polymer composites for many different applications ranging from biomedicine to electronics. In recent times, macroscopic framework structures from t-ZnO have been used as a versatile sacrificial template for the synthesis of multi-scaled foam structures from different nanomaterials such as graphene, hexagonal boron nitride or gallium nitride. Many of these fabrication methods rely on wet-chemical coating processes using nanomaterial dispersions, leading to a strong interest in the actual coating mechanism and factors influencing it. Depending on the type of medium (e.g. solvent) used, different results regarding the homogeneity of the nanomaterial coating can be achieved. In order to understand how a medium influences the coating behavior, the evaporation process of water and ethanol is investigated in this work using in situ synchrotron radiation-based micro computed tomography (SRµCT). By employing propagation-based phase contrast imaging, both the t-ZnO network and the medium can be visualized. Thus, the evaporation process can be monitored non-destructively in three dimensions. This investigation showed that using a polar medium such as water leads to uniform evaporation and, by that, a homogeneous coating of the entire network.
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Oct 2021
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I13-2-Diamond Manchester Imaging
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Berit
Zeller-Plumhoff
,
Anna-Lena
Robisch
,
Daniele
Pelliccia
,
Elena
Longo
,
Hanna
Slominska
,
Alexander
Hermann
,
Martin
Krenkel
,
Malte
Storm
,
Yuri
Estrin
,
Regine
Willumeit-Römer
,
Tim
Salditt
,
Dmytro
Orlov
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[21697]
Open Access
Abstract: Magnesium and its alloys attract increasingly wide attention in various fields, ranging from transport to medical solutions, due to their outstanding structural and degradation properties. These properties can be tailored through alloying and thermo-mechanical processing, which is often complex and multi-step, thus requiring in-depth analysis. In this work, we demonstrate the capability of synchrotron-based nanotomographic X-ray imaging methods, namely holotomography and transmission X-ray microscopy, for the quantitative 3D analysis of the evolution of intermetallic precipitate (particle) morphology and distribution in magnesium alloy Mg–5.78Zn–0.44Zr subjected to a complex multi-step processing. A rich history of variation of the intermetallic particle structure in the processed alloy provided a testbed for challenging the analytical capabilities of the imaging modalities studied. The main features of the evolving precipitate structure revealed earlier by traditional light and electron microscopy methods were confirmed by the 3D techniques of synchrotron-based X-ray imaging. We further demonstrated that synchrotron-based X-ray imaging enabled uncovering finer details of the variation of particle morphology and number density at various stages of processing—above and beyond the information provided by visible light and electron microscopy.
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Sep 2020
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