| Literature DB >> 30965938 |
Fazli Wahid1, Cheng Zhong2, Hai-Song Wang3, Xiao-Hui Hu4, Li-Qiang Chu5.
Abstract
Recently, the rapid emergence of antibiotic-resistant pathogens has caused a serious health problem. Scientists respond to the threat by developing new antimicrobial materials to prevent or control infections caused by these pathogens. Polymer-based nanocomposite hydrogels are versatile materials as an alternative to conventional antimicrobial agents. Cross-linking of polymeric materials by metal ions or the combination of polymeric hydrogels with nanoparticles (metals and metal oxide) is a simple and effective approach for obtaining a multicomponent system with diverse functionalities. Several metals and metal oxides such as silver (Ag), gold (Au), zinc oxide (ZnO), copper oxide (CuO), titanium dioxide (TiO₂) and magnesium oxide (MgO) have been loaded into hydrogels for antimicrobial applications. The incorporation of metals and metal oxide nanoparticles into hydrogels not only enhances the antimicrobial activity of hydrogels, but also improve their mechanical characteristics. Herein, we summarize recent advances in hydrogels containing metal ions, metals and metal oxide nanoparticles with potential antimicrobial properties.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial activity; metal ions/nanoparticles; metal oxide nanoparticles; nanocomposite hydrogels
Year: 2017 PMID: 30965938 PMCID: PMC6418809 DOI: 10.3390/polym9120636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Various antibacterial activities of metal nanoparticles [27].
Figure 2Five main approaches to get nanocomposite hydrogels with a uniform distribution of nanoparticles: (1) formation of the hydrogel in nanoparticle suspension; (2) incorporation of nanoparticles into pre-formed hydrogel; (3) formation of reactive nanoparticles within a pre-formed hydrogel; (4) cross-linking of hydrogel by nanoparticles and (5) hydrogel formation using nanoparticles, cross-linking agents and polymers.
Figure 3Cross-linking of carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCh) by metal ions [85].
Figure 4(A) Synthesis of coated BTM with Ag-NPs; (B) cross-linking of furan-modified gelatin (G-FGE) with Ag nanoparticle-coated BMT by the Diels–Alder cycloaddition reaction [97].
Antibacterial silver nanocomposite hydrogels.
| Nanocomposite Hydrogel | Loading of Ag Nanoparticles | Antimicrobial Activity against | Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poly(vinyl alcohol)/sodium alginate/silver | Entrapment during physical cross-linking | Food packaging | [ | |
| Almond gum-poly(acrylamide)/Ag | In situ preparation of Ag-NPs in hydrogel | Antibacterial material | [ | |
| Acrylic acid/Ag | UV-irradiation | Super absorbent antimicrobial material for pharmaceutical applications | [ | |
| Kappa-Carrageenan (κ-Carrageenan)/Ag | Biosynthesis of Ag-NPs in | Pharmaceutical applications | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl cellulose/Ag | In situ preparation of Ag-NPs with synthesis of hydrogel. | Treatment of cotton fabrics for medical applications | [ | |
| In situ of nano silver in hydrogel | For cotton fabrics to improve its properties | [ | ||
| Polyvinyl alcohol/Ag | Loading of Ag-NPs to polymeric hydrogel | Antimicrobial dressing scaffold | [ | |
| Silver/starch/polyacrylamide nanocomposites | In situ preparation of Ag-NPs inside hydrogel network | Antimicrobial applications | [ | |
| Chitosan based hydrogel/Ag nanocomposites | UV-radiation | Biomedical applications | [ | |
| Polysaccharides such as xanthan gum (XG) and chitosan (CS)/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | In situ formation of Ag-NPs within hydrogel. | Antibacterial wound dressing | [ | |
| Tragacanth gum and graphene oxide/Ag | In situ reduction of Ag+ to Ag0 flower extract of | Bio-absorbent for removal of heavy metals from water, with antimicrobial activity. | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl chitosan/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | Synthesis of Ag-NPs with the formation of hydrogel. | Antimicrobial hydrogels | [ | |
| Silicone/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel film | In situ chemical reduction of Ag+ by NaBH4 | Contact lenses | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)/Ag | Incorporation of Ag-NPs by microwave radiations | Antibacterial applications | [ | |
| Poly (methyl methacrylate- | Chemical reduction of Ag+ by NaBH4 | Antibacterial applications | [ | |
| Iota-Carrageenan/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | Biochemical reduction of Ag+ by leaf extract of | Antimicrobial applications | [ | |
| Silver/poly(vinyl alcohol)/graphene nanocomposite hydrogel film | Electrochemical reduction of Ag+ ions. | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Polythioether dendron/Ag | In situ chemical reduction of Ag+ by NaBH4 | Antifouling coating of biomaterials. | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl cellulose/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | In situ preparation of Ag-NPs in hydrogel as well as incorporation of Ag-NPs into hydrogel | Antibacterial applications | [ | |
| Ag-poly( | In situ reduction of Ag+ with gamma irradiation | Antibacterial applications | [ | |
| Gum acacia (GA)/poly(sodium acrylate)/Ag semi-interpenetrating polymeric hydrogel | In situ reduction of Ag+ with extract of | Antibacterial applications | [ | |
| Ag/Alginate nanocomposite hydrogel | Electrochemical production of Ag-NPs in hydrogel. | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Chitosan-polyethylene glycol/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | In situ reduction of Ag+ as well as incorporation of Ag-NPs into hydrogel | Antimicrobial | [ | |
| Tea/polyacrylamide/Ag nanocomposite hydrogel | In situ reduction of Ag+ by mint leaf extract within hydrogel | Antimicrobial | [ | |
| Alginate/polyvinyl alcohol/ poly( | Electrochemical synthesis of Ag-NPs in hydrogel | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Poly(sulfobetaine acrylamide)/Ag | In situ formation of Ag-NPs within hydrogel | Treatment of infected chronic wounds | [ | |
| 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate/itaconic acid/Ag | In situ reduction of silver nitrate by gamma radiations | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Poly(acryl amide-co-acryloyl phenyl alanine)/Ag | In situ chemical reduction of Ag+ by NaBH4 | Artificial burn dressing | [ |
Antimicrobial hydrogels loaded with ZnO nanoparticles.
| Nanocomposite Hydrogel | Loading of ZnO Nanoparticles | Antimicrobial Activity against | Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gum acacia/poly sodium acrylate/ZnO | In situ preparation by hydrothermal method | Antimicrobial | [ | |
| Alginate/gum acacia/ZnO | Addition of ZnO-NPs during the synthesis of hydrogel | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate modified ZnO (ZnO-PEGMA)/4-azidobenzoic agarose (AG-N3) IPN hydrogel | Addition of ZnO-NPs to PEGMA | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Chitosan/ZnO flexible, microporous hydrogel | Incorporation of ZnO-NPs into hydrogel | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Genipin-crosslinked chitosan (GC), poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)/ZnO/Ag | Incorporation of ZnO and Ag nanoparticles into hydrogel matrix | Wound dressing | [ |
Figure 5Schematic representation of chitosan with Cu2+ and CuO-NPs [159].
Figure 6Schematic representation of incorporation of CuO-NPs into carboxymethyl chitosan hydrogel [160].