An Intrapericardial Injectable Hydrogel Patch for Mechanical-Electrical Coupling with Infarcted Myocardium.
Chaojie YuZhiwei YueMingyue ShiLijie JiangShuang ChenMengmeng YaoQingyu YuXiaojun WuHong ZhangFanglian YaoChangyong WangHong SunJunjie LiPublished in: ACS nano (2022)
Although hydrogel-based patches have shown promising therapeutic efficacy in myocardial infarction (MI), synergistic mechanical, electrical, and biological cues are required to restore cardiac electrical conduction and diastolic-systolic function. Here, an injectable mechanical-electrical coupling hydrogel patch (MEHP) is developed via dynamic covalent/noncovalent cross-linking, appropriate for cell encapsulation and minimally invasive implantation into the pericardial cavity. Pericardial fixation and hydrogel self-adhesiveness properties enable the MEHP to highly compliant interfacial coupling with cyclically deformed myocardium. The self-adaptive MEHP inhibits ventricular dilation while assisting cardiac pulsatile function. The MEHP with the electrical conductivity and sensitivity to match myocardial tissue improves electrical connectivity between healthy and infarcted areas and increases electrical conduction velocity and synchronization. Overall, the MEHP combined with cell therapy effectively prevents ventricular fibrosis and remodeling, promotes neovascularization, and restores electrical propagation and synchronized pulsation, facilitating the clinical translation of cardiac tissue engineering.
Keyphrases
- left ventricular
- tissue engineering
- cell therapy
- hyaluronic acid
- minimally invasive
- heart failure
- drug delivery
- blood pressure
- stem cells
- room temperature
- wound healing
- multiple sclerosis
- mouse model
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- white matter
- cancer therapy
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- ionic liquid
- robot assisted