Harnessing the Interactions of Wound Exudate Cells with Dressings Biomaterials for the Control and Prognosis of Healing Pathways
-
Published:2024-08-23
Issue:9
Volume:17
Page:1111
-
ISSN:1424-8247
-
Container-title:Pharmaceuticals
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Pharmaceuticals
Author:
Saberianpour Shirin12ORCID, Melotto Gianluca13ORCID, Redhead Lucy13, Terrazzini Nadia12ORCID, Forss Jaqueline Rachel13, Santin Matteo12ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Centre for Regenerative Medicine and Devices, University of Brighton, Huxley Building Lewes Road, Brighton BN2 4GJ, UK 2. School of Applied Sciences, University of Brighton, Huxley Building Lewes Road, Brighton BN2 4GJ, UK 3. School of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Brighton, Falmer Campus, Village Way, Brighton BN1 9PH, UK
Abstract
The global socioeconomic challenge generated by wounds requires an understanding of healing and non-healing pathways in patients. Also, the interactions occurring between the wound dressing biomaterials with cells relevant to the healing process have not been sufficiently investigated, thus neglecting the role that wound dressing composition can play in healing. Through the study of six cases of acute surgical wounds, the present work analyses the early (24 h post-surgery) interactions of biochemical and cellular components with (i) Atrauman, a device made of knitted woven synthetic polymeric fibre when used as a primary dressing, and (ii) Melolin, a hydrocolloid engineered as two layers of synthetic and cellulose non-woven fibres when used as a secondary dressing. A pathway towards healing could be observed in those cases where endoglin-expressing cells and M2 macrophages were retained by Atrauman fibres at the interface with the wound bed. On the contrary, cases where the secondary dressing Melolin absorbed these cell phenotypes in its mesh resulted in a slower or deteriorating healing process. The data obtained indicate that a subtraction of progenitor cells by Melolin may impair the healing process and that the analysis of the retrieved wound dressings for biomarkers expressed by cells relevant to wound healing may become an additional tool to determine the patient’s prognosis.
Funder
UKRI Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Reference42 articles.
1. The humanistic and economic burden of chronic wounds: A systematic review;Olsson;Wound Repair Regen.,2019 2. Raziyeva, K., Kim, Y., Zharkinbekov, Z., Kassymbek, K., Jimi, S., and Saparov, A. (2021). Immunology of Acute and Chronic Wound Healing. Biomolecules, 11. 3. Shi, C., Wang, C., Liu, H., Li, Q., Li, R., Zhang, Y., Liu, Y., Shao, Y., and Wang, J. (2020). Selection of Appropriate Wound Dressing for Various Wounds. Front. Bioeng. Biotechnol., 8. 4. Weller, C.D., Team, V., and Sussman, G. (2020). First-line interactive wound dressing update: A comprehensive review of the evidence. Front. Pharmacol., 11. 5. Wound dressing adherence: A review;Punjataewakupt;J. Wound Care,2022
|
|