Medical

Hydrogel bandage for burns is less painful to remove

29th July 2016
Enaie Azambuja
0

A combined team of researchers from Boston University and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, also in Boston, has published a paper in the journal Angewandte Chemie describing a type of hydrogel they have developed for use as a bandage for burn patients—one that can be removed by applying another liquid rather than by cutting, as is done with conventional bandages.

Everyone knows that it hurts when your skin is burned, but few people ever have to undergo the excruciatingly painful experience of having bandages replaced after a serious burn—a process called debridement because it involves cutting healthy skin around the burn site—and worse, it must be done over and over while the skin heals.

Doctors and patients agree that bandage removal is almost as painful as the initial burn and because of that, researchers have sought a better method. Scientists have searched in vain for a replacement treatment for many years, but now it appears that a breakthrough has finally been made.

The team in Boston has created a hydrogel that not only seals burn wounds to prevent entry of bacteria, but can be easily removed by applying an aqueous solution of cysteine methyl ester.

A hydrogel, as its name implies, is a gel that has water as its liquid component. To make one that could be used as a burn bandage, the team combined a polyethylene glycol cross-linker with a lysine-based dendron at the burn site—the two materials then reacted to form a clear hydrogel with adherence properties, and which was also flexible—a must for a bandage that needs to conform to the skin. They report that the hydrogel is also able to remove excess fluid from the wound and maintains a highly humid environment that is conducive to healing.

Thus far, the researchers have only tested their hydrogel on rats with skin burns—such tests so far have proven to be successful, they report—the gel has remained in place and protected the wound and has proven to be easily removable.

More tests will have to be done, of course, to ensure that the gel is safe for humans, but the team is optimistic—they hope to launch clinical trials within the next two years.

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