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Liquid-Liquid Phase-Separated Hydrogel with Tunable Sol-Gel Transition Behavior as a Hotmelt-Adhesive Postoperative Barrier.

Akihiro NishiguchiShima ItoKazuhiro NagasakaTetsushi Taguchi
Published in: ACS applied bio materials (2022)
Postoperative barriers have been widely used to prevent adhesions. However, there are currently few barriers that satisfy clinical requirements, such as tissue adhesion, operability, and biocompatibility. Inspired by the adhesion system of living organisms, we report a liquid-liquid phase-separated hydrogel as a single-syringe hotmelt-type postoperative barrier. Mixing polyethylene glycol with gelatin formed liquid-liquid phase-separated hydrogels through segregative liquid-liquid phase separation. Incorporation of a liquid-liquid phase-separated system into gelatin can enhance the sol-gel transition temperature to give a hotmelt-adhesive property to hydrogels. Hotmelt-adhesive hydrogels became a sol phase and cohered into tissue gaps when warmed and solidified at body temperature to adhere to soft tissues. The hydrogels exhibited tissue adhesion to large intestine tissues and showed improved mechanical strength, gelation time, and shear-thinning properties. In rat cecum-abdominal adhesion models, it was confirmed that the resulting hydrogels prevented abdominal adhesion and did not prevent tissue regeneration. Hotmelt-adhesive hydrogels with high tissue adhesive properties, operability, and biocompatibility have enormous potential as barriers to prevent postoperative complications.
Keyphrases
  • hyaluronic acid
  • tissue engineering
  • drug delivery
  • wound healing
  • drug release
  • biofilm formation
  • patients undergoing
  • stem cells
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • cell migration
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • risk assessment