| Literature DB >> 33139557 |
Jiang Ouyang1,2,3, Xiaoyuan Ji1,2, Xingcai Zhang4, Chan Feng1,2, Zhongmin Tang1,2, Na Kong1,2, Angel Xie1,2, Junqing Wang1,2, Xinbing Sui5, Liu Deng3, Younian Liu3, Jong Seung Kim6, Yihai Cao7, Wei Tao8,2.
Abstract
The treatment of diabetic ulcer (DU) remains a major clinical challenge due to the complex wound-healing milieu that features chronic wounds, impaired angiogenesis, persistent pain, bacterial infection, and exacerbated inflammation. A strategy that effectively targets all these issues has proven elusive. Herein, we use a smart black phosphorus (BP)-based gel with the characteristics of rapid formation and near-infrared light (NIR) responsiveness to address these problems. The in situ sprayed BP-based gel could act as 1) a temporary, biomimetic "skin" to temporarily shield the tissue from the external environment and accelerate chronic wound healing by promoting the proliferation of endothelial cells, vascularization, and angiogenesis and 2) a drug "reservoir" to store therapeutic BP and pain-relieving lidocaine hydrochloride (Lid). Within several minutes of NIR laser irradiation, the BP-based gel generates local heat to accelerate microcirculatory blood flow, mediate the release of loaded Lid for "on-demand" pain relief, eliminate bacteria, and reduce inflammation. Therefore, our study not only introduces a concept of in situ sprayed, NIR-responsive pain relief gel targeting the challenging wound-healing milieu in diabetes but also provides a proof-of-concept application of BP-based materials in DU treatment.Entities:
Keywords: analgesic; black phosphorus; diabetic ulcer; fibrin gel; wound healing
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33139557 PMCID: PMC7682336 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2016268117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205