JOURNAL ARTICLE

Injectable Conductive Hydrogel with Self‐Healing, Motion Monitoring, and Bacteria Theranostics for Bioelectronic Wound Dressing

Abstract

Abstract Wounds at joints are difficult to treat and tend to recover more slowly due to the frequent motions. When using traditional hydrogel dressings, they are easy to crack and undergo bacterial infection, difficult to match and monitor the irregular wounds. Integrating multiple functions within a hydrogel dressing to achieve intelligent wound monitoring and healing remains a significant challenge. In this research, a multifunctional hydrogel is developed based on polysaccharide biopolymer, poly(vinyl alcohol), and hydroxylated graphene through dynamic borate ester bonding and supramolecular interaction. The prepared hydrogel not only exhibits rapid self‐healing (within 60 s), injectable, conductive and motion monitoring properties, but also realizes in situ bacterial sensing and killing functions. It shows excellent bacterial sensitivity (within 15 min) and killing ability via the changes of electrical signals and photothermal therapy, avoiding the emergence of drug‐resistant bacteria. In vivo experiments prove that the hydrogel can promote wound healing effectively. In addition, it displays great electromechanical performance to achieve real‐time monitoring and prevent re‐tearing of the wound at human joints. The injectable pH‐responsive hydrogel with good biocompatibility demonstrates considerable potential as multifunctional bioelectronic dressing for the detection, treatment, management, and healing of infected joint wounds.

Keywords:
Materials science Biocompatibility Photothermal therapy Wound healing Wound dressing Nanotechnology Biomedical engineering Self-healing Vinyl alcohol Composite material Polymer Surgery Medicine

Metrics

81
Cited By
43.51
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
67
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Wound Healing and Treatments
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Rehabilitation
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Electrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Biomaterials
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