| Literature DB >> 27602378 |
Marta Madaghiele1, Christian Demitri1, Alessandro Sannino1, Luigi Ambrosio2.
Abstract
Wound closure represents a primary goal in the treatment of very deep and/or large wounds, for which the mortality rate is particularly high. However, the spontaneous healing of adult skin eventually results in the formation of epithelialized scar and scar contracture (repair), which might distort the tissues and cause lifelong deformities and disabilities. This clinical evidence suggests that wound closure attained by means of skin regeneration, instead of repair, should be the true goal of burn wound management. The traditional concept of temporary wound dressings, able to stimulate skin healing by repair, is thus being increasingly replaced by the idea of temporary scaffolds, or regenerative templates, able to promote healing by regeneration. As wound dressings, polymeric hydrogels provide an ideal moisture environment for healing while protecting the wound, with the additional advantage of being comfortable to the patient, due to their cooling effect and non-adhesiveness to the wound tissue. More importantly, recent advances in regenerative medicine demonstrate that bioactive hydrogels can be properly designed to induce at least partial skin regeneration in vivo. The aim of this review is to provide a concise insight on the key properties of hydrogels for skin healing and regeneration, particularly highlighting the emerging role of hydrogels as next generation skin substitutes for the treatment of full-thickness burns.Entities:
Keywords: Burns; hydrogels; skin regeneration; wound dressing; wound healing
Year: 2014 PMID: 27602378 PMCID: PMC5012024 DOI: 10.4103/2321-3868.143616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Figure 1:Timing and phases of skin wound healing. Following the inflammatory response, a disorganized and loose collagen matrix (granulation tissue) is formed and epithelialized during the proliferation phase. Final remodeling or maturation takes place over several weeks, when the collagen matrix is gradually reorganized by myofibroblasts along lines of tension, which arise from wound contraction. The final outcome of healing can thus be regarded as the sum of two processes, that is contraction and formation of epithelialized scar.
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Figure 2:Synoptic scheme of the current and prospective use of hydrogels in burn wound care.
Figure 3:Increasing number of research articles concerning the development of hydrogel-based wound dressings, published in the last ten years (Source: PubMed. Keywords: hydrogel wound dressing; burn. Date: September 12, 2014).
A few examples of hydrogel-based dressings and regenerative templates investigated in recent literature for the treatment of partial- and full-thickness burns, respectively
| Burn depth | Hydrogel precursor(s) | Additional component(s) | Reference(s) |
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| Partial-thickness | AMPS/PEGDA | — |
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| AMPS | Silver nanoparticles |
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| Chitin | ZnO nanoparticles |
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| Chitosan | — |
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| Keratin | — |
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| Laponite®/alginate (*) | Mafenide |
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| PVA/chitosan | Silver sulfadiazine |
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| PVA | Silver nanoparticles |
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| PVA/lysine/vanillin | — |
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| PVP/PEG | Honey |
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| PVP/PEG | Sea cucumber |
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| Self-assembling peptides | — |
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| Full-thickness | Chitosan | — |
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| Chitosan/collagen | Lysostaphin |
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| Collagen/PEG/fibrin | — |
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| Dextran/PEGDA | — |
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| Dextran | Chitosan microparticles with EGF and VEGF |
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| Hyaluronan | — |
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| Hyaluronan/gelatin/PEGDA (Extracel®) | — |
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AMPS = 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropane sulfonic acid sodium salt, PEGDA = polyethylene glycol diacrylate, PVA = Polyvinyl alcohol, PVP = Polyvinyl pyrrolidone, PEG = polyethylene glycol, EGF = epidermal growth factor, VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor, (*) Laponite is a gel forming clay
Burn classification and healing response
| Burn classification | Depth | Wound appearance | Spontaneous wound closure (Yes/No) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st degree | |||
| Superficial | Epidermis | Red, dry, painful, turns white when pressed | Yes; epidermal regeneration |
| 2nd degree | |||
| Superficial partial-thickness | Papillary (superficial) dermis | Red, moist, blistering, painful, turns white when pressed | Yes; epithelialization with no or negligible scar |
| Deep partial-thickness | Reticular (deep) dermis | Red and white, blistering, painful | Yes (only if not large); epithelialization and scar formation |
| 3rd degree | |||
| Full-thickness | Dermis and subdermal tissues | White, leathery or charred, dry, no pain | No |