Disregarded Mild Photothermal Effect of Titania Nanotubes Array: A Promising Solution for Peri-Implantitis

27 Pages Posted: 16 Feb 2022

See all articles by Boya Xu

Boya Xu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Zhe Li

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Qingyuan Ye

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Guangwen Li

Southwest Medical University

Min Xu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Yi Li

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Lipeng Liu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Wen Song

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Yumei Zhang

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University

Abstract

Peri-implantitis is the main cause of implant failure with high prevalence but limited clinical management. Recently, the photothermal therapy (PTT) has attracted more and more attention, due to its convenient and efficient erasure of bacteria. Unfortunately, the high temperature may also cause healthy tissues damage, so that there is a call for the balance between 'kill and heal' during PTT. Here, the disregarded photothermal effect of titania nanotubes array (TiNTs) is investigated, to realize the mild PTT (mPTT) idea. It is found that the delivered heat is inversely proportional to TiNTs diameters (30-80 nm) and in proportional to NIR light laser power (300-2000 mW). The maximum temperature elevation is reached within 4-6 min (13.4℃ under 300 mW), which belongs to the temperature range of mPTT. In addition, the peri-implantitis related cells including macrophages, endothelial progenitor cells and osteoblasts all exhibit favorable phenotype alterations after mPTT. Specifically, the macrophages are undergoing M2 polarization (anti-inflammation, pro-healing), endothelial progenitor cells show functional suppression (abnormal vascularization inhibition) and osteoblasts exhibit enhanced osteogenic differentiation (beneficial for new bone repair). In conclusion, these findings suggest that mPTT conveyed by TiNTs may control inflammation and promote bone regeneration, which may be a promising choice for peri-implantitis management.

Note:
Funding Information: This work was supported financially by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant numbers: 32071324 and 31800790).

Declaration of Interests: None to declare.

Keywords: peri implantitis, mild photothermal therapy, macrophage polarization, titanium implant, surface nanotopography

Suggested Citation

Xu, Boya and Li, Zhe and Ye, Qingyuan and Li, Guangwen and Xu, Min and Li, Yi and Liu, Lipeng and Song, Wen and Zhang, Yumei, Disregarded Mild Photothermal Effect of Titania Nanotubes Array: A Promising Solution for Peri-Implantitis. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4009381 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4009381

Boya Xu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Zhe Li

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

Qingyuan Ye

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Guangwen Li

Southwest Medical University ( email )

Luzhou, 646000
China

Min Xu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Yi Li

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Lipeng Liu

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Wen Song (Contact Author)

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

Yumei Zhang

Government of the People's Republic of China - Air Force Medical University ( email )

No.169, Changlexi Road
Xi'an, 710032
China

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