Highly Resilient Noncovalently Associated Hydrogel Adhesives for Wound Sealing Patch.

Adv Healthc Mater

Program in Environmental Materials Science, Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Bioresources, Seoul National University, Seoul, 08826, Republic of Korea.

Published: May 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The paper discusses the challenge of creating hydrogel adhesives that are both tough and mechanically resilient for effective tissue adhesion, especially in the context of the human body's movement.
  • - It introduces a new double-network (DN) hydrogel patch that balances tissue adhesion, toughness, and resilience by utilizing specific crosslinkers and linear poly(vinyl imidazole) (PVI).
  • - The resulting hydrogel adhesive features strong wet tissue adhesion and mechanical attributes that facilitate effective tissue sealing and promote healing by keeping the wound area moist.

Article Abstract

The development of hydrogel adhesives with high mechanical resilience and toughness remains a challenging task. Hydrogels must exhibit high mechanical resilience to withstand the inevitable movement of the human body while simultaneously demonstrating strong wet tissue adhesion and appropriate toughness to hold and seal damaged tissues; However, tissue adhesion, toughness, and mechanical resilience are typically negatively correlated. Therefore, this paper proposes a highly resilient double-network (DN) hydrogel wound-sealing patch that exhibits a well-balanced combination of tissue adhesion, toughness, and mechanical resilience. The DN structure is formed by introducing covalently and non-covalently crosslinkable dopamine-modified crosslinkers and physically interactable linear poly(vinyl imidazole) (PVI). The resulting hydrogel adhesive exhibits high toughness and mechanical resilience due to the presence of a DN involving reversible physical intermolecular interactions such as hydrogen bonds, hydrophobic associations, cation-π interactions, π-π interactions, and chain entanglements. Moreover, the hydrogel adhesive achieves strong wet tissue adhesion through the polar hydroxyl groups of dopamine and the amine group of PVI. These mechanical attributes allow the proposed adhesive to effectively seal damaged tissues and promote wound healing by maintaining a moist environment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202303342DOI Listing

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