posted on 2023-06-02, 12:04authored byKelcilene Bruna Ricardo Teodoro, Augusto Duarte Alvarenga, Luís Fernando Rocha Oliveira, Paulo Augusto Marques Chagas, Raphael Guimarães Lopes, Rafaela da Silveira Andre, Luiza Amim Mercante, Fernanda Alves, Mirian Denise Stringasci, Hilde Harb Buzza, Natalia Mayumi Inada, Daniel Souza Correa
Therapeutic intervention to skin wounds requires covering
the affected
area with wound dressings. Interdisciplinary efforts have focused
on the development of smart bandages that can perform multiple functions.
In this direction, here, we designed a low cost (U$0.012 per cm2) multifunctional therapeutic wound dressing fabricated by
loading curcumin (CC) into poly(ϵ-caprolactone) (PCL) nanofibers
using solution blow spinning (SBS). The freestanding PCL/CC bandages
were characterized by distinct physicochemical approaches and were
successful in performing varied functions, including controlled release
of CC, colorimetric indication of the wound conditions, barrier against
microorganisms, being biocompatible, and providing a photosensitive
platform for antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT). The chemical
nature of PCL and CC and the interactions between these components
allowed CC to be released for 192 h (ca. 8 days), which could be correlated
with the Korsmeyer–Peppas model, with a burst release suitable
to treat the inflammatory phase. Due to the CC keto–enol tautomerism,
an optical indication of the healing status could be obtained using
PCL/CC, which occurred immediately, ranging between red/orange and
yellow shades. The effect against pathogenic microorganisms evaluated
by agar disc-diffusion, affected skin wound simulation (ex vivo),
and microbial penetration tests demonstrated the ability to block
and inhibit microbial permeation in different environments. The biocompatibilities
of PCL and PCL/CC were verified by in vitro cytotoxicity study, which
demonstrated that cell viabilities average above 94 and 96% for human
dermal fibroblasts. In addition, the proposed bandage responded to
aPDT applied to an in vivo assay, showing that, when irritated, PCL/CC
was able to reduce the bacteria present on the real wound of mice.
In summary, our findings demonstrate that using PCL and CC to produce
nonwovens by the SBS technique offers potential for the rapid fabrication
of biocompatible and multifunctional wound dressings, paving the way
for large-scale production and utilization of such dressings in the
treatment of skin wounds.