IASST researchers use smart bandage for faster wound healing

April 14, 2018 05:05 pm | Updated 05:06 pm IST

  Synergy:  “The combined action of graphene oxide and curcumin provides superior antibacterial property,” says Devashish Chowdhury (seated).

Synergy: “The combined action of graphene oxide and curcumin provides superior antibacterial property,” says Devashish Chowdhury (seated).

A smart bandage material that can heal wounds better and faster and has antimicrobial properties has been fabricated by a team of researchers from the Institute of Advanced Study in Science and Technology (IASST), Guwahati. The bandage is made of cotton patch coated with chitosan-based hydogel that is loaded with curcumin and graphene oxide. The researchers used curcumin as a model drug and the same can be replaced with other antimicrobials.

“Cotton tends to stick to wounds and being fibrous it is difficult to remove it. By coating the cotton with chitosan and compressing the bandage we get a material with similar properties (porosity and ability to absorb water) as cotton but one that does not stick to the wound,” says Dr. Devasish Chowdhury from the Physical Sciences Division at IASST and corresponding author of a paper published in the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering.

Antimicrobials

More importantly, the absorption capacity of the cotton patch can be utilised for loading nanomaterials and antimicrobials to impart wound-healing properties. The researchers used graphene oxide nanomaterial, since its antimicrobial properties and biocompatibility are already well documented. The nanosize of graphene oxide allows large amount of drug to be loaded on to the patch. Graphene oxide also increases the strength of the patch especially when it gets wet.

“We used curcumin as a model drug. Different drugs can be loaded on the patch depending on the nature of the wound,” says Achyut Konwar from the Physical Sciences Division at IASST and first author of the paper.

Testing

The antimicrobial property of four cotton patches was tested in vitro using Staphyllococcus aureus and E. coli bacteria. While no antimicrobial property was seen in the case of cotton coated with chitosan, patches that had either graphene oxide or curcumin exhibited antimicrobial activity.

“Patches that had both graphene oxide and curcumin had only minimal or no growth of bacterial colonies. The superior antibacterial activity comes from combined action of the antimicrobials,” Dr. Chowdhury says.

The wound-healing property was also tested on rat models for a period of 21 days. The wounds were infected with S. aureus one day after wounds were created and treated with one of the four cotton patches three days after infection. Cotton patch with graphene oxide or curcumin showed almost similar wound-healing capacity at the end of 21 days. But wounds treated with the patch containing both graphene oxide and curcumin showed faster and satisfactory healing along with hair growth in the wounded area by the end of three weeks.

“The cotton patch containing graphene oxide and curcumin served as a smart dressing material for wounds infected with bacteria,” says Konwar. “The high absorption capacity of the patch takes care of the pus and porous nature provides good oxygen supply for faster healing. The absorption capacity was tested using blood plasma and was found to be good.”

“Currently, there is no control over drug release. We are trying to address this by using different nanomaterials. We should first functionalise the nanomaterial so that when the drug is loaded it attaches to the nanomaterial and gets released in a sustained manner,” Dr. Chowdhury says. “We must make sure that like graphene oxide, the chosen nanomaterial is biocompatible and does not get released into the wound.”

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