An Environmentally Stable, Biocompatible, and Multilayered Wound Dressing Film with Reversible and Strong Adhesion

Author:

Chen Baohong1ORCID,He Bingzhi1,Tucker Alexander M.23,Biluck Ian2,Leung Thomas H.4,Schaer Thomas P.5,Yang Shu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering University of Pennsylvania 3231 Walnut Street Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

2. Department of Surgery Division of Neurosurgery Center for Data Driven Discovery in Biomedicine Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 3401 Civic Center Boulevard Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

3. Department of Neurosurgery Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania 3400 Spruce Street Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

4. Department of Dermatology Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania 421 Curie Boulevard Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

5. Department of Clinical Studies School of Veterinary Medicine University of Pennsylvania New Bolton Center 382 West Street Road Kennett Square PA 19348 USA

Abstract

AbstractReversible adhesives for wound care improve patient experiences by permitting reuse and minimizing further tissue injury. Existing reversible bandages are vulnerable to water and can undergo unwanted deformation during removal and readdressing procedures. Here, a biocompatible, multilayered, reversible wound dressing film that conforms to skin and is waterproof is designed. The inner layer is capable of instant adhesion to various substrates upon activation of the dynamic boronic ester bonds by water; intermediate hydrogel layer and outer silicone backing layer can enhance the dressing's elasticity and load distribution for adhesion, and the silicone outer layer protects the dressing from exposure to water. The adhesive layer is found to be biocompatible with mouse skin. Skin injuries on the mouse skin heal more rapidly with the film compared to no dressing controls. Evaluations of the film on skin of freshly euthanized minipigs corroborate the findings in the mouse model. The film remains attached to skins without delamination despite subjecting to various degrees of deformation. Exposure to water softens the film to allow removal from the skin without pulling any hair off. The multilayered design considers soft mechanics in each layer and will offer new insights to improve wound dressing performance and patient comfort.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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