All Stories

  1. Polymeric bisphosphonate derivative of ciprofloxacin – synthesis, structural analysis and antibacterial activity of the prospective conjugate
  2. Fabrication and physicochemical characterization of porous composite microgranules with selenium oxyanions and risedronate sodium for potential applications in bone tumors
  3. A Solid-State NMR Study of Selenium Substitution into Nanocrystalline Hydroxyapatite
  4. Alpha-tricalcium phosphate synthesized by two different routes: Structural and spectroscopic characterization
  5. Corrigendum to “Nanocrystalline hydroxyapatite doped with selenium oxyanions: A new material for potential biomedical applications” [Mater. Sci. Eng. C 39 (2014) 134–142]
  6. Solid-State NMR Study of Mn2+for Ca2+Substitution in Thermally Processed Hydroxyapatites
  7. Synthesis, Characterization and in Vitro Evaluation of New Composite Bisphosphonate Delivery Systems
  8. Nanocrystalline hydroxyapatite doped with selenium oxyanions: A new material for potential biomedical applications
  9. Benign Odontogenic Tumors versus Histochemically Related Tissues: Preliminary Results from Mid-Infrared and Solid-State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
  10. Substituted Hydroxyapatites with Antibacterial Properties
  11. Inverse 31P→1H NMR cross-polarization in hydrated nanocrystalline calcium hydroxyapatite
  12. Solid-state NMR and IR characterization of commercial xenogeneic biomaterials used as bone substitutes
  13. Incorporation of carbonate and magnesium ions into synthetic hydroxyapatite: The effect on physicochemical properties
  14. Mid-infrared reflectance microspectroscopy of human molars: Chemical comparison of the dentin–enamel junction with the adjacent tissues
  15. Kinetics of solid-state NMR cross-polarization from protons to carbon-13 in surgical sutures
  16. Estimation of the specific surface area of apatites in human mineralized tissues using 31P MAS NMR
  17. Concentration of hydroxyl groups in dental apatites: a solid-state 1H MAS NMR study using inverse 31P →1H cross-polarization