| Literature DB >> 36005104 |
Jie Liu1,2, Wenqi Jiang1, Qianyue Xu1, Yongjie Zheng1,2.
Abstract
Antibacterial hydrogel has excellent antibacterial property and good biocompatibility, water absorption and water retention, swelling, high oxygen permeability, etc.; therefore, it widely applied in biomedicine, intelligent textiles, cosmetics, and other fields, especially for medical dressing. As a wound dressing, the antibacterial hydrogel has the characteristics of absorbing wound liquid, controlling drug release, being non-toxic, being without side effects, and not causing secondary injury to the wound. Its preparation method is simple, and can crosslink via covalent or non-covalent bond, such as γ-radiation croFsslinking, free radical polymerization, graft copolymerization, etc. The raw materials are easy to obtain; usually these include chondroitin sulfate, sodium alginate, polyvinyl alcohol, etc., with different raw materials being used for different antibacterial modes. According to the hydrogel matrix and antibacterial mode, the preparation method, performance, antibacterial mechanism, and classification of antibacterial hydrogels are summarized in this paper, and the future development direction of the antibacterial hydrogel as wound dressing is proposed.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial mechanism; antibacterial mode; antibacterial properties; hydrogel; wound dressing
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005104 PMCID: PMC9407327 DOI: 10.3390/gels8080503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gels ISSN: 2310-2861
Preparation methods, properties, and application of various antibacterial hydrogels.
| Synthetic Methods | Species of Hydrogels | Materials | Antimicrobial Capability | Application | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical | Acacia gum-PVA hydrogel | Acacia gum, PVA, glutaraldehyde, salicylic | Against | Wound dressing | [ |
| Silk fibroin crosslinked glycyrrhizic acid and silver sydrogels | SF, Ag, GA | Against | [ | ||
| PHCI hydrogel | 1,3-dibromo-2-propanol, trans-1,4-cyclohexanediamine | Can adsorb and kill | [ | ||
| Silk fibroin/chitosan hydrogel | SF, CS, LiBr | Against | [ | ||
| Physical | Antibacterial chitosan/silver bio-nanocomposite | STPP, chitosan, AgNPs | The antibacterial activity against | Drug carrier | [ |
| Polysaccharide based physically crosslinked double-network antibacterial hydrogel | SA, CS, Zn2+ | Against | Biomedicineureus fields | [ | |
| AA-Al3+-MGA-[VBIm]Br hydrogel | AA, 1-vinyl-3-butylimidazolium, COOH-modified gum arabic, AlCl3 | Against | Wound dressing | [ | |
| PVA-TA hydrogel | PVA, TA | Against | Biomedical fields | [ | |
| Freezing-thawing cycles | Nano-TiO2/CMCS/PVA composite hydrogel | PVA, CMCS, Nano-TiO2 | Against | Cosmetics, medical dressings | [ |
| AgNPs and PVA/CH hydrogel | AgNPs, PVA, CH | Against gram + ve and gram − ve bacteria | Wound dressing | [ | |
| A polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) hydrogel loaded with guava leaf extract (GLE) | GLE, PVA | Against | [ | ||
| Uv crosslinking method | PVA-SbQ/MMT composite hydrogel | MMT, PVA-SbQ | against | Wound dressing | [ |
| Solution polymerization | ZnO@GDM hydrogel | ZnO, GelMA, DMAA, MAA | Against | Biomedical fields | [ |
| Poly(DMA-co-AAc) hydrogel | DMA, AAc, ammonium persulfate | Inhibit the growth of | Antibacterial materials | [ | |
| Photoinduction | Hydrogel containing silver nanoparticles | AgNO3, MDEA, acrylamide, bis-AAm | Fully inhibition of the growth of | Wound dressing | [ |
| Antibacterial acrylamide hydrogels | Acrylamide, silver | Against pathogenic | Water-based applications | [ | |
| Chitosan-PEG hydrogels | Chitosan derivatives, PEG | 100% inhibition of the | Bio-functional materials | [ | |
| Coacervation | CS@CMC@ZeoliteP@KDF hydrogel | ZeoliteP, KDF, CMC, CS | Inhibit the growth of | Bacteriostatic agent | [ |
| Chemical–physical crosslinking | DR-CC hydrogel | Carboxylated chitosan, diazoresin | Can kill | Wound dressing | [ |
| β-CD/PEI/PVA composite hydrogels | β-CD, PVA, PEI | Against | [ | ||
| Lignin hydrogels | SBMA, lignin-MA | Antimicrobial | Biomedical fields | [ | |
| Chitosan/PV A-based hydrogels | CS, PVA | Against | Oral dressing | [ | |
| Free radical crosslinking polymerization | P(MMA-co-MAA)/Ag nanocomposite | MMA, MAA, AgNPs | Against | Smart material | [ |
| Poly(N-[3-(dimethylaminopropyl)] methacrylamide) hydrogels | Cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, KPS, BIS | Against | Antimicrobial agent | [ | |
| Tea Ag nanocomposite | Acrylamide, MBA, TEMDA, KPS | Against | Wound dressing | [ | |
| D/SD-g-PAA-based hydrogels | MBA, AA | Can kill | [ | ||
| Gamma-ray irradiation | Metronidazole/poly(acrylic acid) hydrogel | Metronidazole, poly(acrylic acid) | Against | Wound dressing | [ |
| P-PVA hydrogel | phosphorus-containing PVA | Against various fungi and bacteria | Biological fields | [ | |
| Poly(Agar-co-AAc) hydrogels | AAc, agar | Against | Wound dressing | [ | |
| Polyvinyl pyrrolidone/carboxymethyl cellulose hydrogels | Polyvinyl pyrrolidone, carboxymethyl cellulose, AgNPs | Against bacterial, | Therapeutic dressing | [ | |
| Reverse emulsification- | Alginate nano hydrogel | Alginate, iron (II)-chloride, sodium lactate | Against | Smart textile | [ |
Figure 1Preparation and self-healing mechanism of HA-Fe-EDTA hydrogel. Reproduced with permission [44].
Figure 2Preparation of CS-p(NIPAAm) nanocomposite hydrogel. Reproduced with permission [47].
Figure 3Schematic representation of the formation of a double network hydrogel (i. Polysaccharide-methacrylated; ii. Chemically crosslinked hydrogel; iii. Hydrogel dual-network). Reproduced with permission [48].
Figure 4Antibacterial properties of hyaluronic acid/spider silk-based hydrogels. (a) Inhibitory band test of hyaluronic acid/spider silk-based hydrogels on gram negative Escherichia coli bacteria. (b) Inhibitory band test of hyaluronic acid/spider silk-based hydrogels on gram positive Micrococcus sulfuricum bacteria. (c) Inhibitory zone length of hyaluronic acid/spider silk-based hydrogels on gram negative (Escherichia coli) and gram positive (Micrococcus sulfuricum) bacteria. Reproduced with permission [86].
Figure 5Water absorption and swelling behavior of SS/PVA gels. (A) Water contact angle of S50/P50; (B) Time required for SS/PVA gels to achieve swelling equilibrium; (C) Swelling ratio of SS/PVA gels after immersion into PBS buffers (pH 4, 7.4, 10) at 37 °C. n = 3 per group; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. Reproduced with permission [89].
Figure 6Antibacterial mechanism of Ag NPs. Reproduced with permission [108].
Figure 7Schematic representation of antimicrobial activity of copper nanoparticles. Reproduced with permission [123].
Figure 8The bactericidal mechanism of DCHBSP gel (ciprofloxacin based polymeric gel) against V. chemaguriensis strains in solid and liquid matrices. Reproduced with permission [138].
Figure 9Mode of action for intracellular antimicrobial peptide activity. Reproduced with permission [149].
Figure 10Syntheses of ‘(MTC-VE)n-PEG-(MTC-VE)n’ and vitamin E-containing polycationic polymers. Schematic illustration of incorporating polycationic polymers into hydrogel system (inset). Reproduced with permission [179].