伤口闭合
数码产品
结束语(心理学)
伤口敷料
生物医学工程
医学
伤口愈合
材料科学
外科
工程类
电气工程
复合材料
经济
市场经济
作者
Kaveti Rajaram,Margaret A. Jakus,Henry Chen,B. K. Jain,Darragh G. Kennedy,Elizabeth K. Caso,Navya Mishra,Nivesh Sharma,Baha Erim Uzunoğlu,Won Bae Han,Tae‐Min Jang,Suk‐Won Hwang,Georgios Theocharidis,Brandon J. Sumpio,Aristidis Veves,Samuel K. Sia,Amay J. Bandodkar
出处
期刊:Science Advances
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2024-08-09
卷期号:10 (32)
标识
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.ado7538
摘要
Chronic wounds affect ~2% of the U.S. population and increase risks of amputation and mortality. Unfortunately, treatments for such wounds are often expensive, complex, and only moderately effective. Electrotherapy represents a cost-effective treatment; however, its reliance on bulky equipment limits its clinical use. Here, we introduce water-powered, electronics-free dressings (WPEDs) that offer a unique solution to this issue. The WPED performs even under harsh conditions—situations wherein many present treatments fail. It uses a flexible, biocompatible magnesium-silver/silver chloride battery and a pair of stimulation electrodes; upon the addition of water, the battery creates a radial electric field. Experiments in diabetic mice confirm the WPED’s ability to accelerate wound closure and promote healing by increasing epidermal thickness, modulating inflammation, and promoting angiogenesis. Across preclinical wound models, the WPED-treated group heals faster than the control with wound closure rates comparable to treatments requiring expensive biologics and/or complex electronics. The results demonstrate the WPED’s potential as an effective and more practical wound treatment dressing.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI