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In Situ Growth of Functional Hydrogel Coatings by a Reactive Polyurethane for Biomedical Devices.

Shihua MaoWei LiuZeming XieDong ZhangJiahui ZhouYisheng XuBai-Ping FuSi Yu ZhengLing ZhangJintao Yang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Surface modification of thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) could significantly enhance its suitability for biomedical devices and public health products. Nevertheless, customized modification of polyurethane surfaces with robust interfacial bonding and diverse functions via a simple method remains an enormous challenge. Herein, a novel thermoplastic polyurethane with a photoinitiated benzophenone unit (BPTPU) is designed and synthesized, which can directly grow functional hydrogel coating on polyurethane (PU) in situ by initiating polymerization of diverse monomers under ultraviolet irradiation, without the involvement of organic solvent. The resulting coating not only exhibits tissue-like softness, controllable thickness, lubrication, and robust adhesion strength but also provides customized functions (i.e., antifouling, stimuli-responsive, antibacterial, and fluorescence emission) to the original passive polymer substrates. Importantly, BPTPU can be blended with commercial TPU to produce the BPTPU-based tube by an extruder. Only a trace amount of BPTPU can endow the tube with good photoinitiated capacity. As a proof of concept, the hydrophilic hydrogel-coated BPTPU is shown to mitigate foreign body response in vivo and prevent thrombus formation in rat blood circulation without anticoagulants in vitro. This work offers a new strategy to guide the design of functional polyurethane, an elastomer-hydrogel composite, and holds great prospects for clinical translation.
Keyphrases
  • tissue engineering
  • drug delivery
  • public health
  • wound healing
  • hyaluronic acid
  • ionic liquid
  • oxidative stress
  • biofilm formation
  • risk assessment
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • cystic fibrosis
  • current status
  • global health