Emulgel based on fish skin collagen-microalgae-silver increased neovascularization and re-epithelialization of full thickness burn in rats.
Francisco Fábio Pereira de SouzaIgor Iuco Castro-SilvaFábia Karine AndradeAdriano Lincoln Albuquerque MattosMirrael de Sousa LopesWallady da Silva BarrosoBartolomeu Warlene Silva de SouzaMen de Sá Moreira de Souza-FilhoAndré Luis Coelho da SilvaPublished in: Journal of biomedical materials research. Part B, Applied biomaterials (2024)
Deep skin burn represents a global morbidity and mortality problem, and the limitation of topical treatment agents has motivated research to development new formulations capable of preventing infections and accelerating healing. The aim of this work was to develop and characterize an emulgel based on collagen (COL) and gelatin (GEL) extracted from fish skin associated with Chlorella vulgaris extract (CE) and silver nitrate (AgNO 3 ). COL and GEL were characterized by physicochemical and thermal analyses; and CE by electrophoresis and its antioxidant capacity. Three emulgels formulations were developed: COL (0.5%) + GEL (2.5%) (E1), COL+GEL+CE (1%) (E2), and COL+GEL+CE + AgNO3 (0.1%) (E3). All formulations were characterized by physicochemical, rheology assays, and preclinical analyses: cytotoxicity (in vitro) and healing potential using a burn model in rats. COL and GEL showed typical physicochemical characteristics, and CE presented 1.3 mg/mL of proteins and antioxidant activity of 76%. Emulgels presented a coherent physicochemical profile and pseudoplastic behavior. Preclinical analysis showed concentration-dependent cytotoxicity against fibroblast and keratinocytes. In addition, all emulgels induced similar percentages of wound contraction and complete wound closure in 28 days. The histopathological analysis showed higher scores for polymorphonuclear cells to E1 and greater neovascularization and re-epithelialization to E3. Then, E3 formulation has potential to improve burn healing, although its use in a clinical setting requires further studies.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- gold nanoparticles
- energy transfer
- induced apoptosis
- drug delivery
- nitric oxide
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- optical coherence tomography
- drinking water
- high glucose
- smooth muscle
- case control
- anti inflammatory
- anaerobic digestion
- quantum dots