In vivo metal‐ion release from porous titanium‐fiber material

Abstract
Dense and porous Ti, Ti‐alloy, and stainless steel specimens were implanted in canine trabecular bone. After 6 and 12 months the specimens were retrieved together with bone tissue immediately adjacent. The trace metal content in the tissue samples was determined using neutron activation analysis, differential pulse polarography, graphite furnace atomic‐absorption spectrophotometry, electron microprobe analysis, and laser microprobe analysis. The results are discussed in view of (i) the release of Ti ions, which is larger for porous than for bulk specimens, (ii) the various artifacts arising in electron microprobe (EMP) and laser microprobe mass analysis (LAMMA) determination of compositional gradients of trace metal‐ion content in bone tissue, (iii) the absence of measurable quantities of V in bone tissue, and (iv) the difference in local tissue accumulation between Ti, released from Ti specimens, and Ni, released from stainless steel specimens.

This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit: