The integration of hydrogel-based bioinks with 3D bioprinting technologies presents an innovative approach to chronic wound management, which is particularly challenging to treat because of its multifactorial nature and high risk of complications. Using precise deposition techniques, 3D bioprinting significantly alters traditional wound care paradigms by enabling the fabrication of patient-specific wound dressings that imitate natural tissue properties. Hydrogels are notably beneficial for these applications because of their abundant water content and mechanical properties, which promote cell viability and pathophysiological processes of wound healing, such as re-epithelialization and angiogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
February 2024
Wound infection and tumor recurrence are the two main threats to cancer patients after surgery. Although researchers have developed new treatment systems to address the two significant challenges simultaneously, the potential side effects of the heavy-metal-ion-based treatment systems still severely limit their widespread application in therapy. In addition, the wounds from tumor removal compared with general operative wounds are more complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerforming efficient wound management is essential for infected diabetic wounds due to the complex pathology. Flexible electronics have been recognized as one of the promising solutions for wound management. Herein, a kind of skin-adhesive and self-healing flexible bioelectronic was developed, which could be employed as a diagnostic wound dressing to record diabetic wound healing and monitor electrophysiological signals of the patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCopper sulfide nanoparticles (CuS NPs) have shown great potential in various application fields, especially in biomedical engineering fields. CuS NPs, with the ability to actively capture and kill bacteria and without the worry of biocompatibility, will greatly expand their applications. Herein, a four-arm star thermo-sensitive polyisopropylacrylamide (4sPNIPAm) was used to modify CuS NPs (CuS-PNIPAm NPs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInjectable self-healing hydrogels containing functional nanoparticles (NPs) have attracted much attention in many fields of biomedicine. A series of injectable self-healing hydrogels containing PEGylation CuS NPs based on -carboxyethyl chitosan (CEC) and oxidized sodium alginate (OA) were developed by taking advantages of the unique functions of CuS NPs and chitosan, referred to as CuS NP hydrogels or CEC-OA-CuS, where "" stands for the concentration percentage of the added OA solution (w/v) and "" represents the molar concentration of CuS NPs in the hydrogels. The physical properties of CuS NP hydrogels, syringeability, rapid self-repair ability, and photothermal performance were systematically investigated.
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