| Literature DB >> 33926140 |
Katarína Valachová1, Ladislav Šoltés1.
Abstract
Chitosan, industrially acquired by the alkaline N-deacetylation of chitin, belongs to β-N-acetyl-glucosamine polymers. Another β-polymer is hyaluronan. Chitosan, a biodegradable, non-toxic, bacteriostatic, and fungistatic biopolymer, has numerous applications in medicine. Hyaluronan, one of the major structural components of the extracellular matrix in vertebrate tissues, is broadly exploited in medicine as well. This review summarizes that these two biopolymers have a mutual impact on skin wound healing as skin wound dressings and carriers of remedies.Entities:
Keywords: MitoQ; SkQ; antioxidants; chitin; hyaluronic acid; l-(+)-ergothioneine; resveratrol; wound healing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33926140 PMCID: PMC8123578 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26092535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Scheme 1Concentration of a drug (blue; axis Y) during the period of treatment (axis X) must be in a range of effective treatment level of a drug (area marked in green), whereas it must never be in the range of levels of a drug, which is toxic (area marked in red) and should not be in the range of therapeutically ineffective level of a drug (area marked in yellow) in the site of the drug action. The time interval between two consecutive applications is indicated—.
Active/medical principle or a drug for transdermal applications.
| Group | Active/Medical Principle, Drug | Water Solubility | References | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| − | [ | Polymeric reservoir = free of any active/medical principle, drug. | ||
|
| ✓ | [ | Ref. [ | |
|
| Granisetron | ✓ | [ | This drug exists also as Granisetron hydrochloride. Patch matrix layer is an acrylate-vinylacetate copolymer. |
|
| Diclofenac | (✓) b | [ | This drug exists also as Na salt with increased drug solubility. Diclofenac epolamine is applied to non-woven polyester. |
| Ketoprofen | (✓) | [ | Patch matrix layer is an acrylic pressure-sensitive adhesive polymer. | |
| Piroxicam | (✓) | [ | Multipolymeric | |
| Quercetin | (✓) | [ | ||
|
| Rotigotine | (✓) | [ | This drug exists also as Rotigotine |
| Selegiline | (✓) | [ | This drug exists also as Selegiline | |
|
| Chlorhexidine diacetate | ✓ | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. |
|
| Buprenorphine | (✓) | [ | This drug exists also as Buprenorphine hydrochloride. Multipolymeric composite patch. |
| Fentanyl | (✓) | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. This drug is incorporated within a patch as Fentanyl:Citric acid, 1:1, which increases the drug solubility. | |
| Ketorolac | (✓) | [ | Chitosan-cellulose patch. | |
| Lidocaine | (✓) | [ | Chitosan patch. This drug exists | |
|
| Estradiol | (✓) | [ | Encapsulation to cyclodextrin increases estradiol solubility in water. This drug is combined within a patch also with Noretisterone or Progesterone. |
| Testosterone | (✓) | [ | Encapsulation to cyclodextrin increases testosterone solubility in water. | |
|
| Scopolamine | This drug exists also as Scopolamine hydrobromide. | ||
| Oxybutynin hydrochloride | ✓ | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. | |
|
| Rivastigmine | ✓ | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. |
| Methylphenidate hydrochloride | ✓ | [ | Patch polymer matrix comprises styrene-isoprene-styrene or polyisobutylene polymers. | |
|
| Nitroglycerine | ✓ | [ | Patch contains acrylic-based adhesives with a resinous cross-linking agent. |
|
| Clonidine | (✓) | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. |
| Nicotine | ✓ | [ | Multipolymeric composite patch. |
a The preparation contains also a pain/inflammation diminishing agent 2–8 parts, starch 5–20 parts, and plasticizer 2–10 parts. b (✓) Sparingly soluble in water.
Figure 1Top panel: The two self-associating biopolymers, namely a polyanionic high-molar-mass hyaluronan (purple) and a polycationic chitosan (green) yield a complex coacervate/polyionic complex hydrogel. Bottom panel: The co-application of an active principle (blue dots) in the formation of a three-component viscous solution, i.e., the material used to construct a composite membrane.
Active/medical principle or a drug incorporated into composite membranes of chitosan and hyaluronan.
| Group | Active/Medical Principle, Drug | Formal Charge | Water Solubility | References | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MitoQ | + | ✓ | [ | Scavenger of O2●− anion radicals [ |
| SkQ a | + | ✓ | Scavenger of O2●− anion radicals [ | ||
|
| Edaravone | ✓ | [ | Efficient free-radical scavenging properties [ | |
| Glutathione | + | ✓ | [ | Endogenous antioxidant, H atom and electron donor [ | |
| Phosphatidylcholine dihydroquercetin | + | (✓) | [ | Electron donor. | |
| Resveratrol | (✓) | [ | Endogenous antioxidant, H atom and electron donor. | ||
|
| - | [ | Wound dressing preparations. | ||
| Captopril | ✓ | [ | H atom donor. | ||
| Thiocolchicoside | ✓ | [ | Muscle relaxant with antiinflammatory and analgesic effects. | ||
| Tiopronin | ✓ | [ | H atom donor. |
a SkQ, analogously as MitoQ, is a proper mitochondrially targeted antioxidant for transdermal application.
Figure 2Left panel: Severe ulcers of the man’s leg, middle panel: Schematic application of a composite membrane consisting of a scaffold impregnated with self-associated macromolecules of chitosan (green) and high-molar-mass hyaluronan (purple) with a molecularly dispersed wound healing active medical principle (blue, a proper MTA), right panel: Result of a few-day treatment of the patient’s ulcers. Adapted with permission from ref. [75].
Scheme 2Left panel schematically illustrates release of a hydrophobic low-molar-mass compound from a lipophilic depot. Right panel demonstrates the situation when the hydrophilic compound is released from the hydrophilic reservoir. stratum corneum = thickness 10–15 μm epidermis = 150 μm dermis = 1–2 mm hypodermis/subcutis.
Scheme 3The two electron reductive reactions of MitoQ (top reaction panel) or SkQ (bottom reaction panel) within a mitochondrion.
Scheme 4Reaction of initiation: (a) an intact HA macromolecule reacts with ●OH radical; (b) formation of an intermediate, i.e., a C-centered HA macroradical. Reactions of propagation and of transfer of the free-radical center; (c) formation of a peroxy-type macroradical; (d,e) generation of a HA hydroperoxide and a highly unstable alkoxy-type macroradical. Reaction yielding fragments: (f) an alkoxy-type macroradical and a HA-like macromolecule bearing a terminal C=O group. Both fragments have reduced molar mass.
Scheme 5The flow-chart representing one possible route by which trans-resveratrol acts like the so-called HAT—hydrogen atom transferring compound. More complex reaction flow-charts can be found by readers in the ref. [87].
Scheme 6Thione (left) and thiol (right) forms of l-(+)-ergothioneine.
Figure 3Redox stress. Adapted from [89].