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Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dickinson, LE; Gerecht, S
Published in: Frontiers in physiology
January 2016

Skin regeneration requires the coordinated integration of concomitant biological and molecular events in the extracellular wound environment during overlapping phases of inflammation, proliferation, and matrix remodeling. This process is highly efficient during normal wound healing. However, chronic wounds fail to progress through the ordered and reparative wound healing process and are unable to heal, requiring long-term treatment at high costs. There are many advanced skin substitutes, which mostly comprise bioactive dressings containing mammalian derived matrix components, and/or human cells, in clinical use. However, it is presently hypothesized that no treatment significantly outperforms the others. To address this unmet challenge, recent research has focused on developing innovative acellular biopolymeric scaffolds as more efficacious wound healing therapies. These biomaterial-based skin substitutes are precisely engineered and fine-tuned to recapitulate aspects of the wound healing milieu and target specific events in the wound healing cascade to facilitate complete skin repair with restored function and tissue integrity. This mini-review will provide a brief overview of chronic wound healing and current skin substitute treatment strategies while focusing on recent engineering approaches that regenerate skin using synthetic, biopolymeric scaffolds. We discuss key polymeric scaffold design criteria, including degradation, biocompatibility, and microstructure, and how they translate to inductive microenvironments that stimulate cell infiltration and vascularization to enhance chronic wound healing. As healthcare moves toward precision medicine-based strategies, the potential and therapeutic implications of synthetic, biopolymeric scaffolds as tunable treatment modalities for chronic wounds will be considered.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Frontiers in physiology

DOI

EISSN

1664-042X

ISSN

1664-042X

Publication Date

January 2016

Volume

7

Start / End Page

341

Related Subject Headings

  • 3208 Medical physiology
  • 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
  • 1701 Psychology
  • 1116 Medical Physiology
  • 0606 Physiology
 

Citation

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Dickinson, L. E., & Gerecht, S. (2016). Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing. Frontiers in Physiology, 7, 341. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00341
Dickinson, Laura E., and Sharon Gerecht. “Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing.Frontiers in Physiology 7 (January 2016): 341. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00341.
Dickinson LE, Gerecht S. Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing. Frontiers in physiology. 2016 Jan;7:341.
Dickinson, Laura E., and Sharon Gerecht. “Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing.Frontiers in Physiology, vol. 7, Jan. 2016, p. 341. Epmc, doi:10.3389/fphys.2016.00341.
Dickinson LE, Gerecht S. Engineered Biopolymeric Scaffolds for Chronic Wound Healing. Frontiers in physiology. 2016 Jan;7:341.

Published In

Frontiers in physiology

DOI

EISSN

1664-042X

ISSN

1664-042X

Publication Date

January 2016

Volume

7

Start / End Page

341

Related Subject Headings

  • 3208 Medical physiology
  • 3101 Biochemistry and cell biology
  • 1701 Psychology
  • 1116 Medical Physiology
  • 0606 Physiology