Emerging trends and challenges in polysaccharide derived materials for wound care applications: A review.

Int J Biol Macromol

Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Science, Lab# 540, South Academic Building University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2P5, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Polysaccharides are ideal for wound care because they are natural, affordable, and biocompatible, with the ability to be modified for desired properties.
  • The review focuses on different polysaccharides like cellulose, chitosan, and hyaluronic acid, detailing their unique characteristics and various forms used in wound care, such as films and hydrogels.
  • It also discusses the processing methods for creating these materials and outlines challenges in using polysaccharides for wound management, suggesting ways to enhance their use compared to traditional methods.

Article Abstract

Polysaccharides are favourable and promising biopolymers for wound care applications due to their abundant natural availability, low cost and excellent biocompatibility. They possess different functional groups, such as carboxylic, hydroxyl and amino, and can easily be modified to obtain the desirable properties and various forms. This review systematically analyses the recent progress in polysaccharides derived materials for wound care applications, emphasizing the most commonly used cellulose, chitosan, alginate, starch, dextran and hyaluronic acid derived materials. The distinctive attributes of each polysaccharide derived wound care material are discussed in detail, along with their different forms, i.e., films, membranes, sponges, nanoemulsions, nanofibers, scaffolds, nanocomposites and hydrogels. The processing methods to develop polysaccharides derived wound care materials are also summarized. In the end, challenges related to polysaccharides derived materials in wound care management are listed, and suggestions are given to expand their utilization in the future to compete with conventional wound healing materials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.132048DOI Listing

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