Bioinspired Hemostatic Strategy via Pulse Ejections for Severe Bleeding Wounds

Author:

Lu Bitao1,Hu Enling12,Ding Weiwei3,Wang Wenyi4,Xie Ruiqi12,Yu Kun12,Lu Fei12,Lan Guangqian12,Dai Fangyin12

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Silkworm Genome Biology, College of Sericulture, Textile and Biomass Sciences, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China.

2. Chongqing Engineering Research Center of Biomaterial Fiber and Modern Textile, Chongqing 400715, China.

3. Division of Trauma and Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Research Institute of General Surgery, Jinling Hospital, Medical School of Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210002 Jiangsu Province, China.

4. Department of Applied Biology and Chemical Technology, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.

Abstract

Efficient hemostasis during emergency trauma with massive bleeding remains a critical challenge in prehospital settings. Thus, multiple hemostatic strategies are critical for treating large bleeding wounds. In this study, inspired by bombardier beetles to eject toxic spray for defense, a shape-memory aerogel with an aligned microchannel structure was proposed, employing thrombin-carrying microparticles loaded as a built-in engine to generate pulse ejections for enhanced drug permeation. Bioinspired aerogels, after contact with blood, can rapidly expand inside the wound, offering robust physical barrier blocking, sealing the bleeding wound, and generating a spontaneous local chemical reaction causing an explosive-like generation of CO 2 microbubbles, which provide propulsion thrust to accelerate burst ejection from arrays of microchannels for deeper and faster drug diffusion. The ejection behavior, drug release kinetics, and permeation capacity were evaluated using a theoretical model and experimentally demonstrated. This novel aerogel showed remarkable hemostatic performance in severely bleeding wounds in a swine model and demonstrated good degradability and biocompatibility, displaying great potential for clinical application in humans.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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