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Sustainable Antibacterial Surgical Suture Based on Recycled Silk Resource by an Internal Combination of Inorganic Nanomaterials.

Xin ZhangZhenbei YangXin YangFeng ZhangZhijuan Pan
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The current antibacterial treatment methods of silk sutures can only be finished by surface modification, leading to problems of short antibacterial effects, easy slow-release consumption, prominent toxicity, and susceptibility to drug resistance. Speculatively, surgical sutures combining antibacterial material internally will possess a more promising efficacy. Hence, we extracted recycled regenerated silk fibroin (RRSF) from waste silk resources to make RRSF solutions. Internally combining with inorganic titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) nanoparticles, we fabricated antibacterial RRSF-based surgical sutures. The morphologies, mechanical and antibacterial properties, biocompatibility tests, and in vivo experiments were carried out. The results showed that the surgical sutures with 1.25 wt % TiO 2 acquired 2.40 N knot strength (143 μm diameter) and achieved a sustainable antibacterial effect of 93.58%. Surprisingly, the sutures significantly reduced inflammatory reactions and promoted wound healing. Surgical sutures in this paper realize high-value recovery of waste silk fibers and provide a novel approach to preparing multifunctional sutures.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • silver nanoparticles
  • tissue engineering
  • essential oil
  • anti inflammatory
  • oxidative stress
  • mental health
  • drug delivery
  • cancer therapy