| Literature DB >> 31623607 |
Hung-Jin Huang1, Yu-Liang Tsai1, Shih-Ho Lin1, Shan-Hui Hsu2,3,4.
Abstract
Soft materials have been developed very rapidly in the biomedical field over the past 10 years because of advances in medical devices, cell therapy, and 3D printing for precision medicine. Smart polymers are one category of soft materials that respond to environmental changes. One typical example is the thermally-responsive polymers, which are widely used as cell carriers and in 3D printing. Self-healing polymers are one type of smart polymers that have the capacity to recover the structure after repeated damages and are often injectable through needles. Shape memory polymers are another type with the ability to memorize their original shape. These smart polymers can be used as cell/drug/protein carriers. Their injectability and shape memory performance allow them to be applied in bioprinting, minimally invasive surgery, and precision medicine. This review will describe the general materials design, characterization, as well as the current progresses and challenges of these smart polymers.Entities:
Keywords: Bioprinting; Cell therapy; Precision medicine; Smart materials; Tissue engineering
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31623607 PMCID: PMC6798433 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-019-0571-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Fig. 1An overview of the process diagram of precision medicine, including three core concepts, the activation time, customized design, and local delivery
The mechanisms, components, and applications of smart polymers in precision medicine
| Category | Mechanism | Component | Applications | Benefit | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stimuli response | Temperature | NiPAAm | Biomolecule carriers | Injectable | [ |
| Wound dressing | Long-term antimicrobial and anti-protein absorption | [ | |||
| Sensing, imaging, and carrier | Multifunctional sensing and imaging | [ | |||
| Cell culture platform | Bioactive cell recovery | [ | |||
| PU | Cell or drug carrier | Highly tunable | [ | ||
| Neural tissue engineering | Printable bioink | [ | |||
| Pluronic | Drug delivery | Injectable, thermo-responsive | [ | ||
| Photo | Epoxy resins | Dental restorative or fillers | Durable, easy operation | [ | |
| GelMA | Cell culture platform | Printable multi cells | [ | ||
| Cartilage tissue engineering | Animal model | [ | |||
| Bone tissue engineering | Structurally stable for large bone defects | [ | |||
| PU | Neural tissue engineering | Printable soft bioink | [ | ||
| Self-healing | Physical interaction | Poly(styrene-acrylic acid) | Artificial cartilage or skin | High mechanical strength | [ |
| Poly(glyceryl amine) | Dermal drug delivery | Strong penetration ability | [ | ||
| Polyaniline, phytic acid | Wearable electronics | Mechanically robust | [ | ||
| Silver-nucleoside complex [Ag(I)-(N3-cytidine)2] | Metallo-DNA | Thixotropic self-healing | [ | ||
| Chemical covalent bond | Polyurea, HA | Polyurea flooring systems | Crack repair | [ | |
| HA, glycol chitosan | Cartilage tissue engineering | Biocompatibility | [ | ||
| Graphene nanoplate | Electronic devices | Electrical conductivity | [ | ||
| Shape memory | Temperature | PU | Shape memory stents or scaffolds | Biodegradability | [ |
| N,N-dimethylacrylamide | Artificial intervertebral disk | Strong interface | [ | ||
| Water | PU | Bone tissue engineering | Printable bioink | [ | |
| Cellulose | Pressure sensor | Zero poisson ratio, durable | [ | ||
| pH | Alginate | Bioglue | Adhesive | [ |
Fig. 2Categories and healing mechanism of self-healing hydrogels for the design strategies of biomedical applications
Fig. 3Schematic overview of shape memory materials, including mechanisms, sources of stimulation, various practical or potential applications
Fig. 4The workflow of smart materials in combination with stem cells for therapeutic applications through bioprinting process