4.7 Article

Tannic Acid Tailored-Made Microsystems for Wound Infection

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24054826

Keywords

chitosan microparticles; tannic acid; antimicrobial; wound infection

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Difficult-to-treat infections make complex wounds a problem of great clinical and socio-economic impact. Phytochemicals are promising alternatives for wound care, with antimicrobial and antioxidant activities. Chitosan-based microparticles were developed as carriers of tannic acid to improve its stability, bioavailability, and delivery. These microparticles showed high encapsulation efficiency, antimicrobial potential against common wound pathogens, and improved cell viability and proliferation compared to free tannic acid.
Difficult-to-treat infections make complex wounds a problem of great clinical and socio-economic impact. Moreover, model therapies of wound care are increasing antibiotic resistance and becoming a critical problem, beyond healing. Therefore, phytochemicals are promising alternatives, with both antimicrobial and antioxidant activities to heal, strike infection, and the inherent microbial resistance. Hereupon, chitosan (CS)-based microparticles (as CM) were designed and developed as carriers of tannic acid (TA). These CMTA were designed to improve TA stability, bioavailability, and delivery in situ. The CMTA were prepared by spray dryer technique and were characterized regarding encapsulation efficiency, kinetic release, and morphology. Antimicrobial potential was evaluated against methicillin-resistant and methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA and MSSA), Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherichia coli, Candida albicans, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains, as common wound pathogens, and the agar diffusion inhibition growth zones were tested for antimicrobial profile. Biocompatibility tests were performed using human dermal fibroblasts. CMTA had a satisfactory product yield of ca. 32% and high encapsulation efficiency of ca. 99%. Diameters were lower than 10 mu m, and the particles showed a spherical morphology. The developed microsystems were also antimicrobial for representative Gram+, Gram-, and yeast as common wound contaminants. CMTA improved cell viability (ca. 73%) and proliferation (ca. 70%) compared to free TA in solution and even compared to the physical mixture of CS and TA in dermal fibroblasts.

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