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Facilely Prepared Thirsty Granules Arouse Tough Wet Adhesion on Overmoist Wounds for Hemostasis and Tissue Repair.

Li XiongHuan WangJunsu WangJinyang LuoRuiqi XieGuangqian LanGuangqian LanLiang-Ju NingRong YinWenyi WangEnling Hu
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Bioadhesives have been widely used in hemostasis and tissue repair, but the overmoist and wet nature of wound surface (due to the presence of blood and/or wound exudate) has led to poor wet adhesion of bioadhesives, which interrupts the continuous care of wounds. Here, a thirsty polyphenolic silk granule ( Tan@SF-pwd-hydro ), which absorbs blood and exudate to self-convert to robust bioadhesives ( Tan@SF-gel-hydro ) in situ , was facilely developed in this study for enhanced wet adhesion toward hemostasis and tissue repair. Tan@SF-pwd-hydro could shield wounds' wetness and immediately convert itself to Tan@SF-gel-hydro to seal wounds for hemorrhage control and wound healing. The maximum adhesiveness of Tan@SF-gel-hydro over wet pigskin was as high as 59.8 ± 2.1 kPa. Tan@SF-pwd-hydro is a promising transformative dressing for hemostasis and tissue repair since its hemostatic time was approximately half of that of the commercial hemostatic product, Celox TM , and its healing period was much shorter than that of the commercial bioadhesive product, Tegaderm TM . This pioneering study utilized adverse wetness over wounds to arouse robust adhesiveness by converting thirsty granules to bioadhesives in situ , creatively turning adversity into opportunities. The facile fabrication approach also offers new perspectives for manufacturing sustainability of biomaterials.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • biofilm formation
  • emergency department
  • escherichia coli
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • quantum dots
  • gold nanoparticles