4.8 Article

A pressure-resistant zwitterionic skin sensor for domestic real-time monitoring and pro-healing of pressure injury

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 214, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2022.114528

Keywords

Zwitterionic skin sensor; Pressure injury; Multi-stimuli sensing; Pressure-resistant

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Founda- tion of China [21908160, 22078238, 21961132005]
  2. Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [20JCQNJC00170]

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Pressure injury is a difficult-to-heal wound for patients with limited mobility, and there is currently no existing device that can continuously monitor and promote healing of pressure injuries. In this study, a zwitterionic skin sensor was developed to address this issue. The sensor was able to monitor multiple indicators of pressure injuries in real-time and promote healing. In vivo experiments demonstrated the effectiveness of the sensor. This work provides a feasible domestic device for the treatment and monitoring of pressure injuries.
Pressure injury (PI) is a hard-to-heal wound to patients with the limited mobility, especially paralyzed or elderly persons. These patients also commonly suffer from sensation loss or dementia that is unable to indicate symptoms in time, resulting in missing the golden period for treatment. Therefore, it is highly required to domestic continously real-time monitoring as well as promoting wound healing of PI. However, no existing device has realized these functions for PI. Herein, we prepare a zwitterionic skin sensor that enables pro-healing as well as domestic real-time monitoring the multi-indicators of PI. To apply for a PI dressing that requires to tolerate patient body weight, organosilicon nanoparticles (OSNPs) are designed as crosslinks in the zwitterionic conductive hydrogel (CH-OSNP), which exhibits pressure-resistant properties (99.81% compression to recovery) as well as anti-bacterial adhesion. Moreover, the CH-OSNP-based skin sensor is developed, and the resultant sensor can be sensitive to stress stimuli even under a long-term constant heavy load, which stimulates the pressure of a PI person lying down. In vivo results show that this sensor can not only promote PI healing, but also continuously monitor and distinguish multiple information, such as exudate, swelling, and infection, to prevent PI from being worsen. This work provides a domestic feasible device to cure and monitor the PI of patients.

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