Mechanical properties of an acrylic bone cement with a monomer soluble contrast media
(2004) Transactions - 7th World Biomaterials Congress p.1471-1471- Abstract
- The tensile and compressive properties of acrylic bone cement containing iohexol acetate (IHA) were investigated. The IHA monomer was prepared with 4 g of IHA dissolved in 20 ml of palacos monomer, later mixed with 36 g of palacos powder. The ultimate tensile strength (UTS) and ultimate tensile strain of IHA cement was compared with Palacos R. The IHA cement show significantly higher UTS and ultimate strain than Palacos R. It was shown that the iohexol acetate is a potential bone cement contrast media having higher tensile properties than Palacos R and similar compressive properties.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/614505
- author
- Kjellson, Fred LU ; Brudeli, B ; Abdulghani, Saba LU and McCarthy, Ian LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2004
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Tissue inflammation, X-ray images, Acrylic bone cement, Iohexol
- host publication
- Transactions - 7th World Biomaterials Congress
- pages
- 1471 - 1471
- publisher
- Biomaterials 2004 Congress Managers
- conference name
- Transactions - 7th World Biomaterials Congress
- conference location
- Sydney, Australia
- conference dates
- 2004-05-17 - 2004-05-21
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:13844272026
- ISBN
- 1877040193
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 93d4a191-4980-4d84-8647-b3c3a55bba58 (old id 614505)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:41:47
- date last changed
- 2022-01-29 22:20:15
@inproceedings{93d4a191-4980-4d84-8647-b3c3a55bba58, abstract = {{The tensile and compressive properties of acrylic bone cement containing iohexol acetate (IHA) were investigated. The IHA monomer was prepared with 4 g of IHA dissolved in 20 ml of palacos monomer, later mixed with 36 g of palacos powder. The ultimate tensile strength (UTS) and ultimate tensile strain of IHA cement was compared with Palacos R. The IHA cement show significantly higher UTS and ultimate strain than Palacos R. It was shown that the iohexol acetate is a potential bone cement contrast media having higher tensile properties than Palacos R and similar compressive properties.}}, author = {{Kjellson, Fred and Brudeli, B and Abdulghani, Saba and McCarthy, Ian}}, booktitle = {{Transactions - 7th World Biomaterials Congress}}, isbn = {{1877040193}}, keywords = {{Tissue inflammation; X-ray images; Acrylic bone cement; Iohexol}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{1471--1471}}, publisher = {{Biomaterials 2004 Congress Managers}}, title = {{Mechanical properties of an acrylic bone cement with a monomer soluble contrast media}}, year = {{2004}}, }