Tissue adhesion of hydrogels plays an important role in wound healing, which can improve the efficiency of wound treatment, stop bleeding, facilitate tissue growth and wound closure. However, most non-covalent crosslinked hydrogels have weak tissue adhesion and rheological properties. Furthermore, it remains a challenge to synthesize a fully physically crosslinked hydrogel with good rheological properties without compromising its tissue adhesion strength. In this paper, a physically crosslinked hydrogel was developed from a mixture of chitosan and pullulan in different polymer volume ratios using aqueous NaOH. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, thermal analysis, rheological and lap shear tests were used to evaluate the influence of polymer volume ratios on the rheological, and tissue adhesive properties of the hydrogels. It was found that the hydrogels possessed high tissue adhesive strength ranging from 18.0 ± 0.90 to 49.0 ± 2.45 kPa and good storage moduli up to 5.157 ± 1.062 kPa. Gentamicin was incorporated into this polymer matrix and the release profile was investigated. The ratio of chitosan and pullulan to obtain hydrogels with optimum viscoelastic and tissue adhesive properties was identified to be CS/PUL 2:1. These results indicated that the synthesized hydrogels can be potential materials for biomedical applications such as medical adhesives and wound dressings. © 2024 Elsevier B.V.
Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Biological Macromolecules
Volume276
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2024

    Research areas

  • Chitosan, gentamicin, Hydrogels, Tissue-adhesion, Adhesion, Adhesives, Biomaterials, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Medical applications, Rheology, Scanning electron microscopy, Sodium hydroxide, Thermoanalysis, Adhesive properties, Cross-linked hydrogels, Mechanical and physical properties, Pullulans, Rheological property, Tissue adhesion, Tissue adhesives, Volume ratio, Wound healing applications, Chitosan, chitosan, crosslinked hydrogel, gentamicin, hydrogel, pullulan, tissue adhesive, unclassified drug, glucan, Article, biocompatibility, biodegradability, bleeding, body surface, calibration, cell proliferation, chemical reaction kinetics, controlled study, drug delivery system, drug solubility, drug synthesis, dynamic mechanical analysis, dynamics, encapsulation, evaporation, flow kinetics, mechanical properties, nonhuman, outcomes research, physical chemistry, physical properties, polymerization, porosimetry, scanning electron microscopy, static electricity, thermal analysis, thermogravimetry, volatilization, water evaporation, wound healing, chemistry, drug effect, mechanics, Gentamicins, Glucans, Mechanical Phenomena, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Tissue Adhesives, Wound Healing

ID: 126390771