4.7 Review

Trends in Photothermal Nanostructures for Antimicrobial Applications

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24119375

Keywords

photothermal antimicrobials; antibacterial mechanisms; antibiofilm; wound healing

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The rapid development of antimicrobial resistance due to broad antibiotic utilization in healthcare and food industries is a critical global public health issue. Nanotechnology offers new materials with unique properties and adaptability to address drug-resistant bacterial infections in safe and targeted ways. Photothermal antibacterial nanomaterials, such as plasmonic metals, semiconductors, and organic polymers, show promise in developing controllable hyperthermia as antibacterial platforms. This review discusses the current state of the art in photothermal antibacterial nanomaterials, strategies for optimizing antimicrobial efficiency, antibacterial mechanisms, and potential applications in biofilm removal and infected wound therapy. The challenges, limitations, and future perspectives of photothermal antimicrobial therapy are also explored.
The rapid development of antimicrobial resistance due to broad antibiotic utilisation in the healthcare and food industries and the non-availability of novel antibiotics represents one of the most critical public health issues worldwide. Current advances in nanotechnology allow new materials to address drug-resistant bacterial infections in specific, focused, and biologically safe ways. The unique physicochemical properties, biocompatibility, and wide range of adaptability of nanomaterials that exhibit photothermal capability can be employed to develop the next generation of photothermally induced controllable hyperthermia as antibacterial nanoplatforms. Here, we review the current state of the art in different functional classes of photothermal antibacterial nanomaterials and strategies to optimise antimicrobial efficiency. The recent achievements and trends in developing photothermally active nanostructures, including plasmonic metals, semiconductors, and carbon-based and organic photothermal polymers, and antibacterial mechanisms of action, including anti-multidrug-resistant bacteria and biofilm removal, will be discussed. Insights into the mechanisms of the photothermal effect and various factors influencing photothermal antimicrobial performance, emphasising the structure-performance relationship, are discussed. We will examine the photothermal agents' functionalisation for specific bacteria, the effects of the near-infrared light irradiation spectrum, and active photothermal materials for multimodal synergistic-based therapies to minimise side effects and maintain low costs. The most relevant applications are presented, such as antibiofilm formation, biofilm penetration or ablation, and nanomaterial-based infected wound therapy. Practical antibacterial applications employing photothermal antimicrobial agents, alone or in synergistic combination with other nanomaterials, are considered. Existing challenges and limitations in photothermal antimicrobial therapy and future perspectives are presented from the structural, functional, safety, and clinical potential points of view.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available