4.7 Article

Bioengineered Water-Responsive Carboxymethyl Cellulose/Poly(vinyl alcohol) Hydrogel Hybrids for Wound Dressing and Skin Tissue Engineering Applications

Journal

GELS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/gels9020166

Keywords

hydrogel; carboxymethyl cellulose; poly(vinyl alcohol); wound dressing; soft tissue engineering; polysaccharide-based hydrogels

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The study reports the synthesis and characterization of hybrid hydrogels for wound dressings using a water-responsive system. These hydrogels demonstrated tunable physicochemical properties and were produced through an eco-friendly process. The hydrogels showed high absorbency and cytocompatibility, making them suitable for chronic wound healing and skin tissue engineering applications.
The burden of chronic wounds is growing due to the increasing incidence of trauma, aging, and diabetes, resulting in therapeutic problems and increased medical costs. Thus, this study reports the synthesis and comprehensive characterization of water-responsive hybrid hydrogels based on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) using citric acid (CA) as the chemical crosslinking agent, with tunable physicochemical properties suitable to be applied as a wound dressing for soft tissue engineering applications. They were produced through an eco-friendly process under mild conditions. The hydrogels were designed and produced with flexible swelling degree properties through the selection of CMC molecular mass (Mw = 250 and 700 kDa) and degree of functionalization (DS = 0.81), degree of hydrolysis of PVA (DH > 99%, Mw = 84-150 kDa) associated with synthesis parameters, CMC/PVA ratio and extension of chemical crosslinking (CA/CMC:PVA ratio), for building engineered hybrid networks. The results demonstrated that highly absorbent hydrogels were produced with swelling degrees ranging from 100% to 5000%, and gel fraction from 40% to 80%, which significantly depended on the concentration of CA crosslinker and the presence of PVA as the CMC-based network modifier. The characterizations indicated that the crosslinking mechanism was mostly associated with the chemical reaction of CA carboxylic groups with hydroxyl groups of CMC and PVA polymers forming ester bonds, rendering a hybrid polymeric network. These hybrid hydrogels also presented hydrophilicity, permeability, and structural features dependent on the degree of crosslinking and composition. The hydrogels were cytocompatible with in vitro cell viability responses of over 90% towards model cell lines. Hence, it is envisioned that this research provides a simple strategy for producing biocompatible hydrogels with tailored properties as wound dressings for assisting chronic wound healing and skin tissue engineering applications.

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