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Self-Growing Hydrogel Bioadhesives for Chronic Wound Management. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hydrogel bioadhesives are being developed as an innovative alternative to conventional wound dressings, particularly for managing chronic wounds effectively.
  • The new self-growing hydrogel bioadhesive (sGHB) patch shows quick attachment to tissues and gradually strengthens over 120 hours, mitigating stress at the wound edge and adapting to wound expansion.
  • In tests on diabetic mice, the sGHB patch improved healing by regulating inflammation and promoting faster skin repair and blood vessel growth, indicating potential for various clinical wound management applications.

Article Abstract

Hydrogel bioadhesives have emerged as a promising alternative to wound dressings for chronic wound management. However, many existing bioadhesives do not meet the functional requirements for efficient wound management through dynamically mechanical modulation, due to the reduced wound contractibility, frequent wound recurrence, incapability to actively adapt to external microenvironment variation, especially for those gradually-expanded chronic wounds. Here, a self-growing hydrogel bioadhesive (sGHB) patch that exhibits instant adhesion to biological tissues but also a gradual increase in mechanical strength and interfacial adhesive strength within a 120-h application is presented. The gradually increased mechanics of the sGHB patch could effectively mitigate the stress concentration at the wound edge, and also resist the wound expansion at various stages, thus mechanically contracting the chronic wounds in a programmable manner. The self-growing hydrogel patch demonstrated enhanced wound healing efficacy in a mouse diabetic wound model, by regulating the inflammatory response, promoting the faster re-epithelialization and angiogenesis through mechanical modulation. Such kind of self-growing hydrogel bioadhesives have potential clinical utility for a variety of wound management where dynamic mechanical modulation is indispensable.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202408538DOI Listing

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