Dehydration-Toughing Dual-Solvent Gels with Viscoelastic Transition for Infectious Wound Treatment.
Liangyu WangKuilong LiuShuai CuiLin QiuDongzhi YangJun NieGuiping MaPublished in: Advanced healthcare materials (2024)
The modulus of traditional biomedical hydrogels increases exponentially meditated by dehydration-stiffing mechanism, which leads to the failure of interface matching between hydrogels and soft tissue wounds. It is found in the study that the dual-solvent gels exhibit dehydration-toughening mechanism with the slowly increasing modulus that are always match the soft tissue wounds. Therefore, dual-solvent glycerol hydrogels (GCFe n-gly DGHs) are prepared with hydrophobically modified catechol chitosan (hmCSC) and gelatin based on the supramolecular interactions. GCFe n-gly DGHs exhibit excellent water retention capacity with a total solvent content exceeding 80%, permanent skin-like modulus within a range of 0.45 to 4.13 kPa, and stable photothermal antibacterial abilities against S, aureus, E. coli, as well as MRSA. Infectious full-thickness rat skin defect model and tissue section analysis indicate that GCFe n-gly DGHs are able to accelerate infectious wound healing by alleviating the inflammatory response, promoting granulation tissue growth, re-epithelialization, collagen deposition, and vascular regeneration. As a result, GCFe n-gly DGHs is expected to become the next-generation biological gel materials for infectious wound treatment.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- soft tissue
- inflammatory response
- ionic liquid
- drug delivery
- stem cells
- staphylococcus aureus
- oxidative stress
- hyaluronic acid
- drug release
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- solar cells
- optical coherence tomography
- mass spectrometry
- combination therapy
- replacement therapy
- quantum dots
- cancer therapy
- energy transfer