Biocompatible material
In surgery, a biomaterial is a synthetic or natural material used to replace part of a living system or to function in intimate contact with living tissue. Biomaterials are intended to interface with biological systems to evaluate, treat, augment or replace any tissue, organ or function of the body. (Compare this definition to that of bio-based material.)
In the first Consensus Conference of the European Society for Biomaterials a biomaterial was defined as "a nonviable material used in a medical device, intended to interact with biological systems" but was later in the second round defined as a "material intended to interface with biological systems to evaluate, treat, augment or replace any tissue, organ or function of the body" (see list of 5 below).
A biomaterial is different from a biological material such as bone that is produced by a biological system. Artificial hips, vascular stents, artificial pacemakers, and catheters are all made from different biomaterials and comprise different medical devices.
Biomimetic materials are not made by living organisms but have compositions and properties similar to those made by living organisms. The calcium hydroxylapatite coating found on many artificial hips is used as a bone replacement that allows for easier attachment of the implant to the living bone.
Surface functionalization may provide a way to transform a bio-inert material into a biomimetic or even bio-active material by coupling of protein layers to the surface, or coating the surface with self-assembling peptide scaffolds to lend bioactivity and/or cell attachment 3-D matrix. Different approaches to functionalization of biomaterials exist. Plasma processing has been successfully applied to chemically inert materials like polymers or silicon to graft various functional groups to the surface of the implant.
Useful Links
- Publications on MIT's latest synthetic biocompatible biomaterials from luminaries Shuguang Zhang, Alex Rich, Robert Langer, Alan Grodzinsky
- PuraMatrix synthetic clinical-grade hydrogel biomaterials
- COOK® Medical Biomaterials | SIS Technology
References
- Dorland medical dictionary
- Larousse dictionary of science and technology
- William's dictionary of biomaterials, DF Williams, 1999, ISBN 0-85323-921-5