| Literature DB >> 35539132 |
He Liu1, Chenyu Wang1,2, Chen Li1, Yanguo Qin1, Zhonghan Wang1, Fan Yang1, Zuhao Li1, Jincheng Wang1.
Abstract
Functional active wound dressings are expected to provide a moist wound environment, offer protection from secondary infections, remove wound exudate and accelerate tissue regeneration, as well as to improve the efficiency of wound healing. Chitosan-based hydrogels are considered as ideal materials for enhancing wound healing owing to their biodegradable, biocompatible, non-toxic, antimicrobial, biologically adhesive, biological activity and hemostatic effects. Chitosan-based hydrogels have been demonstrated to promote wound healing at different wound healing stages, and also can alleviate the factors against wound healing (such as excessive inflammatory and chronic wound infection). The unique biological properties of a chitosan-based hydrogel enable it to serve as both a wound dressing and as a drug delivery system (DDS) to deliver antibacterial agents, growth factors, stem cells and so on, which could further accelerate wound healing. For various kinds of wounds, chitosan-based hydrogels are able to promote the effectiveness of wound healing by modifying or combining with other polymers, and carrying different types of active substances. In this review, we will take a close look at the application of chitosan-based hydrogels in wound dressings and DDS to enhance wound healing. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35539132 PMCID: PMC9078458 DOI: 10.1039/c7ra13510f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Differences in the normal and diabetic wound healing phases (Reprint with permission from L. I. F. Moura et al.[5]).
Some commercial chitin- and chitosan-based wound dressings
| Trademarks | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Chitipack P® Eisai Co | Chitin-based. Swollen chitin disperse in poly(ethylene terephthalate). Favors early granulation tissue formation. For defects difficult to suture and large skin defects |
| Chitipack S® Eisai Co | Chitin-based. Sponge-like chitin obtains from squid. Favors early granulation tissue formation, no retroactive scar formation. Suitable for traumatic wounds and surgical tissue defects |
| Tegasorb® 3M | Chitosan-based. Containing chitosan particles will swell while absorbing exudate and forming a soft gel. A layer of waterproof Tegaderm® film dressing covers the hydrocolloid. Suitable for leg ulcers, sacral wounds, chronic wounds |
| Chitoflex® HemCon | Chitosan-based. Antibacterial and biocompatible. It combines strongly to tissue surfaces and forms a flexible barrier, which can seal and stabilize the wound. For stuffing into a wound track to control severe bleeding |
| Chitopack C® Eisai | Chitosan-based. Cotton-like chitosan. Repair body tissue completely, rebuild normal subcutaneous tissue and regenerate skin regularly |
| Chitopoly® Fuji spinning | Chitosan-based. Chitosan and polynosic Junlon poly(acrylate) for preparing antimicrobial wears. For preventing dermatitis |
| Chitoseal® Abbott | Chitosan-based. Good biocompatibility and hemostatic function. For bleeding wounds |
Fig. 2Application of chitosan-based hydrogel dressings. The unique biological properties of chitosan-based hydrogels enable it to serve both as a wound dressing and as a drug delivery system to deliver active substances, which could further promote wound healing.
Fig. 3The mechanisms of chitosan-based hydrogels to promote wound healing. Chitosan provides a non-protein matrix for three dimensional tissue growth and activates macrophages for tumoricidal activity. It stimulates cell proliferation and histoarchitectural tissue organization. Chitosan is a hemostat, which helps in natural blood clotting and blocks nerve endings reducing pain (Reprint with permission from R. Jayakumar et al.[29]).
The common chitosan modification methods for wound healing dressings
| Modification | Remarks |
|---|---|
| Carboxymethyl chitosan | Enhanced water solubility. The most fully explored derivative of chitosan; it is an amphoteric polymer, whose solubility depends on pH, when pH > 7 is water-soluble |
| Alkylation chitosan | Very important as amphiphilic polymers based on polysaccharides. Improve the stability of the interfacial film, cationic surfactant adsorbed on the alkyl chain grafted on chitosan, promotes its solubilization |
| Trimethyl chitosan ammonium | This cationic derivative, water soluble over all the practical pH range, is obtained by quaternization of chitosan. These polymers show good flocculating and antistatic properties |
|
| Having good complexing efficiency for cations such as Ca2+, and transition metals (Cu( |
| Carbohydrate branched chitosans | These derivatives are water soluble. Carbohydrates can be grafted on the chitosan backbone at the C-2 position by reductive alkylation, which are important as they are recognized by the corresponding specific lectins and thus could be used for drug targeting |
| Chitosan-grafted copolymers | When graft with different polymers have different properties. One of the most explored derivatives is PEG-grafted chitosan, which has the advantage of being water soluble, depending on the degree of grafting |
| Thiolated urea derivatives | Thiourea chitosan increases the antibacterial properties |
| Sugar derivatives |
|
Fig. 4Three main methods of drug loading. (A) The easiest drug loading method is to place the fully formed hydrogel into medium saturated with the therapeutic. (B) In the case of larger drugs and bioligands, the payload must be entrapped during the gelation process. (C) In order to limit the loss of the therapeutic reserve (and the risk of toxic exposure), drugs can be covalently or physically linked to the polymer chains prior to gelation (Reprint with permission from N. Bhattarai et al.[12]).
Three different drug loading strategies for chitosan hydrogels
| Permeation | Entrapment | Covalent bonding | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loadable drugs | Small molecules | Small molecules, peptides, proteins, micro/nanospheres | Small molecules, peptides, proteins |
| Network formations | Physical, covalently cross-linked, and IPN gels | Physical and covalently cross-linked gels | Physical and covalently cross-linked gels |
|
| NO | YES | YES |
| Degree of burst release | High | Moderate | None |
| Smart delivery mechanisms | pH-Sensitive swelling, polymer dissolution and degradation | pH-Sensitive swelling, polymer dissolution and degradation | Enzyme-sensitive release, polymer dissolution and degradation |
| Release durations | Hours to days | Days and weeks | Days to months |
| Comments | High loading efficiencies for hydrophilic drugs, low chance of drug deactivation | Suitable for loading hydrophilic and hydrophobic drugs, moderate chance of drug deactivation, chance of toxic material leaching | Best suited for hydrophilic drugs, possible drug deactivation during polymer bonding |
Major growth factors in wound healing
| Cell sources | Effects during wound healing | |
|---|---|---|
| EGF | Platelets, macrophages, fibroblasts | Cell motility and proliferation, increased levels in the acute wound, decreased levels in the chronic wound |
| FGF | Macrophages, endothelial cells, fibroblasts | Angiogenesis and fibroblast mitogen, keratinocyte mitogen and mitogen |
| TGF-β1, TGF-β2 | Platelets, keratinocytes, macrophages, lymphocytes, fibroblasts | Re-epithelialization and inflammation, granulation tissue formation, fibrosis and tensile strength, increased levels in the acute wound, decreased levels in the chronic wound |
| PDGF | Platelets, keratinocytes, macrophages, endothelial cells, fibroblasts | Chemotaxis, inflammation, granulation tissue formation, matrix remodeling, increased levels in the acute wound, decreased levels in the chronic wound |
| VEGF | Platelets, neutrophils, macrophages, endothelial cells, fibroblasts | Angiogenesis, granulation tissue formation, increased levels in the acute wound, decreased levels in the chronic wound |
| IGF | Fibroblasts neutrophils, macrophages, hepatocytes, skeletal muscle | Stimulates wound re-epithelialisation and fibroblast proliferation |
| HGF | Fibroblasts | Suppression of inflammation, granulation tissue formation, angiogenesis, re-epithelialization |
Fig. 5MSC-laden hydrogels can prohibit chronic inflammation and contribute to growth factor secretion, resulting in accelerated wound contraction, ECM secretion, angiogenesis, re-epithelialization, hair follicle and sebaceous gland regeneration and reduced scar formation (Reprint with permission from Chen et al.[186]).