Litcius/Paper detail

Portable Handheld “SkinPen” Loaded with Biomaterial Ink for In Situ Wound Healing

Fuyuan Zhou, Liangjing Xin, Shuya Wang, Kaiwen Chen, Dize Li, Si Wang, Yuanding Huang, Chuanhang Xu, Mengjiao Zhou, Wenjie Zhong, Huanan Wang, Tao Chen, Jinlin Song

2023ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces28 citationsDOI

Abstract

In situ bioprinting has emerged as an attractive tool for directly depositing therapy ink at the defective area to adapt to the irregular wound shape. However, traditional bioprinting exhibits an obvious limitation in terms of an unsatisfactory bioadhesive effect. Here, a portable handheld bioprinter loaded with biomaterial ink is designed and named "SkinPen". Gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) and Cu-containing bioactive glass nanoparticles (Cu-BGn) serve as the main components to form the hydrogel ink, which displays excellent biocompatibility and antibacterial and angiogenic properties. More importantly, by introducing ultrasound and ultraviolet in a sequential programmed manner, the SkinPen achieves in situ instant gelation and amplified (more than threefold) bioadhesive shear strength. It is suggested that ultrasound-induced cavitation and the resulting topological entanglement contribute to the enhanced bioadhesive performance together. Combining the ultrasound-enhanced bioadhesion with the curative role of the hydrogel, the SkinPen shows a satisfactory wound-healing effect in diabetic rats. Given the detachable property of the SkinPen, the whole device can be put in a first-aid kit. Therefore, the application scenarios can be expanded to many kinds of accidents. Overall, this work presents a portable handheld SkinPen that might provide a facile but effective approach for clinical wound management.

Topics & Concepts

BioadhesiveMaterials scienceBiomaterialBiomedical engineeringBiocompatibilityGelatinNanotechnologySelf-healing hydrogelsWound healingInkwellMethacrylateWound dressingPolymerComposite materialDrug deliverySurgeryCopolymerPolymer chemistryMedicineChemistryBiochemistryMetallurgyWound Healing and TreatmentsHemostasis and retained surgical itemsSurgical Sutures and Adhesives