4.7 Article

Influence of Injection Application on the Sol-Gel Phase Transition Conditions of Polysaccharide-Based Hydrogels

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms222413208

Keywords

injectable hydrogels; thermoinduced gelation; HPC; chitosan; orthokinetic aggregation; perikinetic aggregation; shear-induced molecules deformation

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Low shear rates accelerate gelation, while high shear rates prolong gelation time; the highest shear rates may either slow down or speed up gelation, depending on the thixotropic properties of the materials.
Polysaccharide matrices formed via thermoinduced sol-gel phase transition are promising systems used as drug carriers and minimally invasiveness scaffolds in tissue engineering. The strong shear field generated during injection may lead to changes in the conformation of polymer molecules and, consequently, affect the gelation conditions that have not been studied so far. Chitosan (CS) and hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) sols were injected through injection needles (14 G-25 G) or sheared directly in the rheometer measuring system. Then the sol-gel phase transition conditions were determined at 37 degrees C using rheometric, turbidimetric, and rheo-optical techniques. It was found that the use of low, respecting injection, shear rates accelerate the gelation, its increase extends the gelation time; applying the highest shear rates may significantly slow down (HPC) or accelerate gelation (CS) depending on thixotropic properties. From a practical point of view, the conducted research indicates that the use of thin needles without preliminary tests may lead to an extension of the gelation time and consequently the spilling of the polymeric carrier before gelation. Finally, an interpretation of the influence of an intensive shear field on the conformation of the molecules on a molecular scale was proposed.

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