合成水凝胶作为模拟血凝块的伤口愈合材料。

IF 5 Q1 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Manuel K Rausch, Sapun H Parekh, Berkin Dortdivanlioglu, Adrianne M Rosales
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引用次数: 0

摘要

过度出血或大出血每年造成数百万平民和非平民伤亡。此外,即使最初的出血被成功止住,伤口后遗症(如感染)也是慢性发病率的一个重要来源。为了治疗急性和慢性伤口,人们发现、测试并采用了许多伤口愈合材料。其中包括纱布等局部敷料,以及天然材料和仿生物材料。然而,这些材料都无法成功模拟人体自身伤口愈合材料--血凝块--的复杂动态特性。具体来说,血凝块具有复杂的机械和生化特性,这些特性在空间和时间尺度上各不相同,可引导伤口愈合反应,因此是理想的伤口愈合材料。在本手稿中,我们回顾了血凝块复杂的机械和生化特性,评述了当前的伤口愈合材料,并确定了新材料可提供额外功能的机会,特别关注水凝胶。我们重点介绍了合成水凝胶的最新发展,这些水凝胶能够模拟血凝块的更多特性:作为血栓和组织修复的刺激物。我们的结论是,未来模仿血凝块生物化学、力学和结构设计的水凝胶材料可与令人兴奋的血小板样颗粒相结合,用作止血剂,同时促进生物伤口愈合反应。因此,我们相信合成水凝胶是满足对更好的伤口愈合材料的明确需求的理想候选材料。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Synthetic hydrogels as blood clot mimicking wound healing materials.

Synthetic hydrogels as blood clot mimicking wound healing materials.

Synthetic hydrogels as blood clot mimicking wound healing materials.

Excessive bleeding-or hemorrhage-causes millions of civilian and non-civilian casualties every year. Additionally, wound sequelae, such as infections, are a significant source of chronic morbidity, even if the initial bleeding is successfully stopped. To treat acute and chronic wounds, numerous wound healing materials have been identified, tested, and adopted. Among them are topical dressings, such as gauzes, as well as natural and biomimetic materials. However, none of these materials successfully mimic the complex and dynamic properties of the body's own wound healing material: the blood clot. Specifically, blood clots exhibit complex mechanical and biochemical properties that vary across spatial and temporal scales to guide the wound healing response, which make them the ideal wound healing material. In this manuscript, we review blood clots' complex mechanical and biochemical properties, review current wound healing materials, and identify opportunities where new materials can provide additional functionality, with a specific focus on hydrogels. We highlight recent developments in synthetic hydrogels that make them capable of mimicking a larger subset of blood clot features: as plugs and as stimuli for tissue repair. We conclude that future hydrogel materials designed to mimic blood clot biochemistry, mechanics, and architecture can be combined with exciting platelet-like particles to serve as hemostats that also promote the biological wound healing response. Thus, we believe synthetic hydrogels are ideal candidates to address the clear need for better wound healing materials.

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