1 research outputs found
In Situ Formation of Hydrogel Wound Dressing Based on Carboxymethyl Chitin/Tannic Acid for Promoting Skin Wound Healing
Triggering the healing
process of drug-resistant bacteria-infected
wounds has attracted great attention due to global morbidity that
may induce gangrene, amputation, and even death. Here, a chitin derivative,
carboxymethyl chitosan (CMC), tannic acid (TA), and Cu2+ were used for hydrogel engineering. Using sodium bicarbonate as
the neutralizer and reductant, hydrogen bonds between CMC and TA and
in situ Cu(OH)2 generation via ion coordination force between
Cu2+ and TA facilitated the synthesis of CMC/TA/Cu hydrogel.
Cu2+ and TA release, cytotoxicity, in vitro cell migration,
angiogenesis, and antidrug-resistant bacteria were measured. Besides,
wound closure was evaluated in vivo using the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-infected excisional
dermal wound mouse model. Negligible toxicity was observed both in
vitro and in vivo. Dermal cell migration and angiogenesis were significantly
enhanced. In vivo, the CMC/TA/Cu hydrogel induced effective re-epithelialization,
collagen deposition, inflammatory alleviation, and MRSA inhibition
during wound repair in mice. All these results confirmed that the
CMC/TA/Cu hydrogel is a promising novel dressing for chronic wound
healing in clinic
