4.7 Article

A Composite Hydrogel Based on Pectin/Cellulose via Chemical Cross-Linking for Hemorrhage

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.627351

Keywords

pectin; cellulose; cross-linking; hydrogel; hemostasis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81570107, 81873426, 31800820]
  2. Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province [2019B1515120082]

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The composite hydrogel CH-P 40% demonstrated a dense network structure, retained various chemical bonds, cellulose crystal structures, and showed favorable thermal stability. It also exhibited increased cell proliferation rates and no pathological lesions in mouse organs, indicating good biocompatibility. Additionally, the hydrogel-treated liver wounds showed less bleeding within 3 minutes, highlighting its potential as a rapid hemostatic biomedical material.
Hydrogel-based material have been demonstrated promising potential for hemostasis. Herein, we prepared a composite hydrogel (CH-P 40%) by combining pectin and cellulose in ionic liquid. The superficial morphology of the CH-P 40% was explored by SEM; the internal chemical bonds, crystal form and thermal stability were determined via FTIR, XRD and thermogravimetric analysis, respectively. The biocompatibilities of the CH-P 40% hydrogel was evaluated by MTT, flow cytometry, and histological observation with H&E staining. Furthermore, the hemostatic effect was evaluated via the blood clotting index and mouse liver hemostatic model. The results showed that the CH-P 40% hydrogel exhibited a dense network structure and retained its chemical bonds, including the OH, CH, C=O, -CH2, CO, C1-H, and beta-glycosidic bonds. Simultaneously, the hydrogel retained the Cellulose I and II crystal structure and favorable thermal stability. Moreover, the proliferation rates of CH-P 40%-treated cells increased (P > 0.05), and there were no pathological lesions in the mouse organs, which suggests favorable biocompatibility. The results showed less bleeding in the hydrogel-treated liver wound within 3 min. Overall, the pectin-cellulose hydrogel is stable and possesses favorable biocompatibility and hemostatic ability, further highlighting that the composite hydrogel has the potential to be rapid hemostatic biomedical material.

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