The aim of the present work is to contribute in the fight against the spread of Covid-19, a novel human coronavirus, in hospitals, public transport, airlines, and any enclosed areas. In this study, we have adopted the physical disinfection method by using UVC light as agent. The UVC devices are studied and classified according their disinfectant units, complementary devices, combined disinfection agents, mobilities, and order types. Our finding shows that a mobile robot is the most efficient device to inactivate microorganisms, so we have developed a robot called i-Robot UVC. The robot is equipped with eight UVC lamps around a central column and two lamps on the top. The column is fixed on a mobile base where several sensors are integrated to measure temperature and humidity on the one hand, and on the other, to detect motion plus position and to avoid obstacles. The robot can estimate automatically the disinfection time while monitored by Wi-Fi connection from a phone or a tablet. I-Robot UVC disinfects rooms and equipment with ultraviolet light, and shuts down when humans are around to keep them safe. The robot can kill 99,999% bacteria and various through UVC lamps led. The innovative robot UVC was patented under the number TN2020/0063.
A new generation of ceramic on ceramic (BIOLOX ®delta) bearings has emerged more than 10 years ago proving a high resistance to wear and good clinical results. However, biological reactions to wear debris, particularly the nanoparticles, need to be evaluated. The first originality of this study is to start from real wear particles obtained by the hip walking simulator (CERsim). These particles were compared with particles obtained by usual methods to assess the biocompatibility of materials: press machine (CERpress). Two ranges of ceramic particles were thus observed: ceramic particles with micron (intergranular fractures) and nano sizes (intragranular fractures), and characterized compared to ultra‐high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). The second originality of this work is to assess the cellular reaction using the primary joint chondrocyte cultures simulating the osteogenesis process and not the cell lines, which are used to simulate the biological reaction of osteolysis. The first results showed a significant difference in cell viability between the cells in contact with particles from the walking simulator and those obtained with the press machine. On the other hand, it was found that the way of extraction of the particles from the lubricant could significantly affect the biological reaction. More interestingly, nano‐sized ceramic particles showed a significant impact on the secretion of functional inflammatory mediators, agreeing with recent results in vivo. These novel methods of characterizing the osteogenic impact of UHMWPE and ceramic wear debris can complement the conventional expertise method focusing previously on the osteolysis aspect.
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