Three-Dimensional Printed Cellulose for Wound Dressing Applications.
Farah FahmaAfrinal FirmandaJaydee CabralDaniel PletzerJohn FisherBhushan MahadikI Wayan ArnataDewi SartikaAnting WulandariPublished in: 3D printing and additive manufacturing (2023)
Wounds are skin tissue damage due to trauma. Many factors inhibit the wound healing phase (hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and alteration), such as oxygenation, contamination/infection, age, effects of injury, sex hormones, stress, diabetes, obesity, drugs, alcoholism, smoking, nutrition, hemostasis, debridement, and closing time. Cellulose is the most abundant biopolymer in nature which is promising as the main matrix of wound dressings because of its good structure and mechanical stability, moisturizes the area around the wound, absorbs excess exudate, can form elastic gels with the characteristics of bio-responsiveness, biocompatibility, low toxicity, biodegradability, and structural similarity with the extracellular matrix (ECM). The addition of active ingredients as a model drug helps accelerate wound healing through antimicrobial and antioxidant mechanisms. Three-dimensional (3D) bioprinting technology can print cellulose as a bioink to produce wound dressings with complex structures mimicking ECM. The 3D printed cellulose-based wound dressings are a promising application in modern wound care. This article reviews the use of 3D printed cellulose as an ideal wound dressing and their properties, including mechanical properties, permeability aspect, absorption ability, ability to retain and provide moisture, biodegradation, antimicrobial property, and biocompatibility. The applications of 3D printed cellulose in the management of chronic wounds, burns, and painful wounds are also discussed.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- extracellular matrix
- ionic liquid
- oxidative stress
- aqueous solution
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- healthcare
- surgical site infection
- staphylococcus aureus
- silver nanoparticles
- metabolic syndrome
- endothelial cells
- risk assessment
- body mass index
- randomized controlled trial
- signaling pathway
- high resolution
- skeletal muscle
- systematic review
- mass spectrometry
- quality improvement
- drinking water
- pain management
- weight gain
- health risk
- chronic pain
- anti inflammatory
- stress induced
- adverse drug
- heavy metals
- affordable care act