4.7 Review

Nanocomposite scaffolds for accelerating chronic wound healing by enhancing angiogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-020-00755-7

Keywords

Scaffold; Angiogenesis; Chronic wound; Wound healing; Skin tissue engineering; Nanobiotechnology

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The skin serves as the body's primary barrier against external pathogens and maintaining homeostasis. Damage to the skin can have significant impacts on health and quality of life. Tissue engineering aims to enhance tissue regeneration, with improving angiogenesis being one of the most effective treatments for skin tissue regeneration.
Skin is the body's first barrier against external pathogens that maintains the homeostasis of the body. Any serious damage to the skin could have an impact on human health and quality of life. Tissue engineering aims to improve the quality of damaged tissue regeneration. One of the most effective treatments for skin tissue regeneration is to improve angiogenesis during the healing period. Over the last decade, there has been an impressive growth of new potential applications for nanobiomaterials in tissue engineering. Various approaches have been developed to improve the rate and quality of the healing process using angiogenic nanomaterials. In this review, we focused on molecular mechanisms and key factors in angiogenesis, the role of nanobiomaterials in angiogenesis, and scaffold-based tissue engineering approaches for accelerated wound healing based on improved angiogenesis.

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