dr inż. Marcin Wekwejt
Employment
- Postdoctoral researcher at CHU-ULaval
- Assistant professor at Institute of Manufacturing and Materials Technology
- Opiekun naukowy at Scientific Club 'Materials in Medicine'
Social media
Contact
- marcin.wekwejt@pg.edu.pl
Assistant professor
- Institute of Manufacturing and Materials Technology
- Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Ship Technology
- Workplace
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Budynek M-T
room 213 open in new tab - Phone
- +48 58 347 16 78
- marcin.wekwejt@pg.edu.pl
Obtained scientific degrees/titles
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2021-12-13
Obtained science degree
dr inż. materials engineering (Engineering and Technology)
Publication showcase
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Nanosilver-loaded PMMA bone cement doped with different bioactive glasses – evaluation of cytocompatibility, antibacterial activity, and mechanical properties
Nanosilver-loaded PMMA bone cement (BC-AgNp) is a novel cement developed as a replacement for conventional cements. Despite favorable properties and antibacterial activity, BC-AgNp still lacks biodegradability and bioactivity. Hence, we investigated the doping with bioactive glasses (BGs) to create a new bioactive BC characterized by time-varying porosity and gradual release of nanosilver. The BC Cemex was used as the base material...
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Dual-Setting Bone Cement Based On Magnesium Phosphate Modified with Glycol Methacrylate Designed for Biomedical Applications
Magnesium phosphate cement (MPC) is a suitable alternative for the currently used calcium phosphates, owing to beneficial properties like favorable resorption rate, fast hardening, and higher compressive strength. However, due to insufficient mechanical properties and high brittleness, further improvement is still expected. In this paper, we reported the preparation of a novel type of dual-setting cement based on MPC with poly(2-hydroxyethyl...
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Injectable bone cement based on magnesium potassium phosphate and cross-linked alginate hydrogel designed for minimally invasive orthopedic procedures
Bone cement based on magnesium phosphate has extremely favorable properties for its application as a bioactive bone substitute. However, further improvement is still expected due to difficult injectability and high brittleness. This paper reported the preparation of novel biocomposite cement, classified as dual-setting, obtained through ceramic hydration reaction and polymer cross-linking. Cement was composed of magnesium potassium...
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