An improved process for the fabrication and surface treatment of custom-made titanium cranioplasty implants informed by surface analysis

Author:

Cardona Milovan Joe1,Turner Catherine2,Ross Calum1ORCID,Baird Elaine2,Black Richard Anthony1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

2. The West of Scotland Regional Maxillofacial Laboratory, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, UK

Abstract

Cranioplasty implants are routinely fabricated from commercially pure titanium plates by maxillofacial prosthetists. The differing fabrication protocols adopted by prosthetists working at different hospital sites gives rise to considerable variations in surface topography and composition of cranioplasty implants, with residues from the fabrication processes having been found to become incorporated into the surface of the implant. There is a growing recognition among maxillofacial prosthetists of the need to standardise these protocols to ensure quality and consistency of practice within the profession. In an effort to identify and eliminate the source of the inclusions associated with one such fabrication protocol, the present study examined the surfaces of samples subjected to each of the manufacturing steps involved. Surface and elemental analysis techniques identified the main constituent of the surface inclusions to be silicon from the glass beads used to texture the surface of the implant during fabrication. Subsequent analysis of samples prepared according to a revised protocol resulted in a more homogeneous titanium dioxide surface as evidenced by the reduction in area occupied by surface inclusions (from 8.51% ± 2.60% to 0.93% ± 0.62%). These findings may inform the development of improved protocols for the fabrication of titanium cranioplasty plates.

Funder

European Social Fund

AO Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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