New Study Suggests Safer Option Over Metal Implants for Bone Fracture

Published On 2025-02-17 03:00 GMT   |   Update On 2025-02-17 03:00 GMT
A study published today in Nature shows the research team’s innovative approach to making the zinc alloy as strong as permanent steel implants and more durable than other biodegradable options like magnesium-based implants.
Surgeons routinely use stainless steel or titanium, which stay in the body forever, can cause discomfort and may require follow-up surgeries. A new zinc alloy, designed by Monash biomedical engineers, could solve these problems by being mechanically strong but gentle enough to degrade safely over time while supporting optimal healing.
The research shows that by engineering the size and orientation of the material’s grains, the zinc alloy can bend and adapt in unique ways to accommodate the shapes of its neighbouring tissues.
Lead researcher, Professor Jian-feng Nie, from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, said the innovative material had the potential to transform orthopaedic care by reducing complications, minimising the need for additional surgeries, and offering a sustainable alternative to permanent metallic implants.
“Our zinc alloy material could revolutionise orthopaedic care – opening the door to safer, smaller implants that not only enhance patient comfort but also promote better healing outcomes by minimising disruption to surrounding tissues,” Professor Nie said.
“An implant that never disappears will always be a risk to the patient. On the other hand, one that degrades too fast won’t allow adequate time for the bones to heal. With our zinc alloy material, we can achieve the optimal balance between strength and controlled degradation of the implant to promote better healing.”
“This made it not only stronger but more flexible, offering a game-changing alternative for orthopaedics,” Professor Nie said.
Reference: Wu, C., Lin, F., Liu, H. et al. Stronger and coarser-grained biodegradable zinc alloys. Nature (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08415-8
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