4.6 Review

Recent Advancement of Functional Hydrogels toward Diabetic Wound Management

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 7, Issue 48, Pages 43364-43380

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c05538

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Diabetic wound healing is a dynamic and regulated process, but it becomes dysregulated in diabetic individuals, leading to chronic wounds. The use of hydrogel-based systems has shown promise in treating diabetic wounds due to their favorable properties. This review focuses on the advancement of functional hydrogels for diabetic wound management and discusses different approaches to treat diabetic wounds using hydrogels.
Wound healing is a dynamic, orchestrated process comprising partially overlapping phases of hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This programmed process, dysregulated in diabetic individuals, results in chronic diabetic wounds. The normal process of healing halts at the inflammatory stage, and this prolonged inflammatory phase is characteristic of diabetic wounds. There are a few U.S. Food & Drug Administration approved skin substitutes; dermal matrixes are commercially available to manage diabetic wounds. However, expensiveness and nonresponsiveness in a few instances are the major limitations of such modalities. To address the issues, several treatment strategies have been exploited to treat chronic wounds; among them hydrogel-based systems showed promise due to favorable properties such as excellent absorption capabilities, porous structure, tunable mechanical strength, and biocompatibility. In the past two decades, hydrogels have become one of the most acceptable systems in the field of wound dressing material, offering single functionality to multifunctionality. This review focuses on the advancement of functional hydrogels explored for diabetic wound management. The process of diabetic wound healing is discussed in the light of the normal healing process, and the role of macrophages in the process is explained. This review also discusses the different approaches to treat diabetic wounds using functional hydrogels, along with their future opportunities.

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