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Macroporous Hydrogels for Tissue Engineering and Wound Care

Hydrogels are three-dimension networks of water-soluble polymer chains and have attracted interest in biomedical engineering, targeted drug delivery, tissue engineering, and regenerative medicine due to their ability to retain water coupled with their highly tunable physicochemical and biological properties. In the specific context of wound care, hydrogels can both maintain high wound hydration as well as absorb and manage wound exudate, both of which are major challenges in wound care. Hydrogel wound dressings can simultaneously deliver medication directly to the wound to suppress or treat infections, including antibiotic-resistant strains such as Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). This thesis develops two wound care products that can address challenges in the selection and delivery of drugs to treat antibiotic-resistant strain infections: (1) in situ-gelling poly(oligoethylene glycol methacrylate) (POEGMA) hydrogel wound dressings containing self-assembled nanoparticles encapsulated with fusidic acid; and (2) an in situ calcium-crosslinked alginate scaffold produced using pressurized gas expanded liquids (PGX) technology impregnated with fusidic acid or tigecycline using supercritical adsorptive precipitation (sc-AP). The POEGMA hydrogel wound dressings helped supress MRSA infection and prevent systemic infection during the course of treatment, facilitating a 1-2 fold decrease in bacterial load in the wound bed. The sc-AP technology was shown to be compatible with loading clinically-relevant doses of both antimicrobial compounds, while the resulting wound dressings were effective in treating MRSA wound infections. In case of tigecycline loaded alginate scaffolds, the infection was completely cleared.
In tissue engineering applications, injectable macroporous hydrogels are particularly limited by two factors: (1) their need for invasive administration, typically implantation; and (2) their generally weak mechanics. In the first case, reports of injectable hydrogels often involve toxic compounds or by-products that result in loss of cell viability. This thesis addresses this challenge by design and development of a POEGMA-based macroporous hydrogel scaffold based on a novel, non-cytotoxic pore forming emulsion based on perfluorocarbons. Use of the pore-forming emulsion significantly improved cell viability in vitro 14 days after injection and was well tolerated in vivo with minimal to no inflammatory response. In the second case, an interpenetrating “hard-soft” nanofibrous hydrogel network was fabricated by co-electrospinning POEGMA with poly(caprolactone) (PCL). The PCL phase significantly enhanced the mechanical properties of the electrospun POEGMA hydrogel scaffold making handling and manipulating the scaffolds possible, while the presence of the POEGMA phase significantly improved the biological properties of PCL scaffolds in terms of supporting significantly enhanced cell proliferation and delayed bacterial adhesion.
Collectively, the advances made in this work address key challenges in the application of hydrogels in tissue engineering and wound care, with future potential to be applied to solve practical clinical challenges. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Hydrogels have been studied in various applications like targeted drug delivery, tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, and medical devices due to their tunable nature and their capacity to retain water. In many of these applications the pore size and porosity are the key to the performance of a hydrogel in a given application. In particular, the rate at which nutrients or wastes can move through a hydrogel, the stiffness of a hydrogel, and the interactions of a hydrogel with cells are all strongly dependent on the porosity of a hydrogel. Therefore, many techniques have been developed to produce hydrogels with well-defined pore sizes, in particular “macroporous” hydrogels that have larger pores at or above the size of a cell. However, the typical techniques used to make such hydrogels often require additives or manufacturing steps that make them challenging to implement in different applications. This thesis addresses challenges in the fabrication of controllable porosity of hydrogels for applications in wound care (including the treatment of antibiotic-resistant infected wounds) and regenerative medicine, in the latter case enabling minimally invasive injection of a macroporous hydrogel as well as enhancing its mechanics to better mimic native tissues. Each of these solutions aims to bring effective novel treatments to patients, offering alternative therapies for existing challenges in healthcare.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/28497
Date January 2023
CreatorsToufanian, Samaneh
ContributorsHoare, Todd, Chemical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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