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Vanillin loaded-physically crosslinked PVA/chitosan/itaconic membranes for topical wound healing applications. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vanillin-loaded hydrogel membranes made from PVA, chitosan, and itaconic acid were created through a freezing-thawing cycle method, confirming polymer chain entanglements.
  • The study explored various physicochemical properties such as swelling ratio, mechanical characteristics, gel fraction percentage, hydrolytic degradation, and thermal stability, revealing that higher chitosan and itaconic acid content improved swelling and mechanical features but decreased gel fraction.
  • Tests for cell viability and antimicrobial activity demonstrated that the hydrogels effectively supported cell survival and showed potential for use as antibacterial dressings or materials in wound healing.

Article Abstract

Vanillin loaded-physically crosslinked hydrogel membranes made of PVA/chitosan/itaconic acid (PVA-CS-IA) were prepared using freezing-thawing (F-T) cycle method. To ensure the entanglement of PVA-CS-IA chains, three F-T cycles were repeated. The polymeric chains entanglements were confirmed and characterized by different instrumental characterizations. Physicochemical properties for example, swelling ratio, mechanical characteristics, gel fraction percentage (GF%), hydrolytic degradation, and thermal stability of PVA-CS-IA membrane were discussed in detail. The findings showed that the swelling ratio, mechanical characteristics, and hydrolytic degradation of the crosslinked membranes enhanced with increasing CS-IA contents in membranes composition; however, GF% gradually declined with CS-IA content. Additionally, cell viability test using HFB-4 cell line and antimicrobial activity against and were evaluated using MTT assay and the bacterium growth inhibition percentage method; respectively. Notably, with varying incubation durations and membrane concentrations, all examined constructed hydrogels showed significant cell survival percentages. The findings supported the notion that produced hydrogel membranes might be used in a professional setting as antibacterial dressings or biomaterials for quick wound healing rate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/22808000241281273DOI Listing

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