RESUMO
Ultrastructural difractometric and chemical evaluations of calcium partially stabilized zirconium (Ca-PSZ) implants were performed in an in vivo study on animals in order to evaluate its biological behaviour. The chemical-morphological investigations demonstrated the presence of an osteogenetic activity at the bone-biomaterial interface. The new-osteogenesis was preceded by the formation of a loose connective tissue around the implants. This mesenchymal-type tissue without a capsular organization, allowing modulation of the mechanical forces to which the implant is subject, could be considered a positive event in the osteogenetic process and not a sign of future failure of the implant. Finally, microanalytical investigations carried out on non-implanted and implanted Ca-PSZ tools suggested that the surface of this ceramic material does not undergo modification once it has been inserted in the biological environment (12 months).
RESUMO
Chromosome aberrations were induced in cultured human cells by proton beams of 31, 12, and 8 MeV. The frequencies of isochromatid breaks and dicentrics have been analysed as a function of proton energy and dose. Both effects are largely dependent on proton energy; isochromatid breaks increased linearly with the dose, whereas dicentrics show a definite parabolic behaviour. The experimental data were fitted to the analytic form Y = KDn and Y = alpha D + beta D2 and the best fitted values of the parameters are reported and discussed. The values of RBE for the isochromatid breaks are in the ratio 1.7:1.3:1 for 8, 12, and 31 MeV respectively. In the case of the dicentrics the RBE values are dose-dependent function of the type CD-n. The three distributions of dicentrics among the cells do not fit a Poisson distribution.