4.7 Article

Ethyl Hydroxyethyl Cellulose-A Biocompatible Polymer Carrier in Blood

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126432

Keywords

polymer; nanomaterial; ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose; platelets; plasma expanders

Funding

  1. WIPANO project grant of the German Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) [03THW13L07]
  2. Gutenberg Research College at the Johannes Gutenberg-University of Mainz

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The study compared the effects of an ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose (EHEC) solution with other biocompatible materials on platelet aggregation. The results showed that the EHEC solution exhibited shear-thinning behavior similar to human blood and did not enhance blood clot formation or platelet aggregation and activation, suggesting its potential as a biocompatible carrier material in blood circulation.
The biocompatibility of carrier nanomaterials in blood is largely hampered by their activating or inhibiting role on the clotting system, which in many cases prevents safe intravascular application. Here, we characterized an aqueous colloidal ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose (EHEC) solution and tested its effect on ex vivo clot formation, platelet aggregation, and activation by thromboelastometry, aggregometry, and flow cytometry. We compared the impact of EHEC solution on platelet aggregation with biocompatible materials used in transfusion medicine (the plasma expanders gelatin polysuccinate and hydroxyethyl starch). We demonstrate that the EHEC solution, in contrast to commercial products exhibiting Newtonian flow behavior, resembles the shear-thinning behavior of human blood. Similar to established nanomaterials that are considered biocompatible when added to blood, the EHEC exposure of resting platelets in platelet-rich plasma does not enhance tissue thromboplastin- or ellagic acid-induced blood clotting, or platelet aggregation or activation, as measured by integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) activation and P-selectin exposure. Furthermore, the addition of EHEC solution to adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-stimulated platelet-rich plasma does not affect the platelet aggregation induced by this agonist. Overall, our results suggest that EHEC may be suitable as a biocompatible carrier material in blood circulation and for applications in flow-dependent diagnostics.

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