Nanomaterials decoration on commercial cotton bandages for pain and infection management
Rohit Parkale, Priyanka Pulugu, Prasoon Kumar

TL;DR
This study develops a nanomaterial-coated cotton bandage with antibacterial and drug-releasing properties, aiming to improve wound healing and infection prevention compared to traditional bandages.
Contribution
It introduces a novel nanomaterial coating on cotton gauze that provides sustained drug release and enhanced antibacterial and UV-blocking properties.
Findings
Sustained drug release for 15 days observed.
Enhanced antibacterial activity demonstrated.
UV radiation blocking by ZnO nanoparticles confirmed.
Abstract
Cotton gauze bandages (CGB) are one of the most widely used wound dressing materials. These bandages are placed over a wound site to keep it clean and facilitate the healing process. However, it is used along with antibacterial agents (ointment) to prevent post-dressing infections. Further, other medications have to be orally administered for managing pain and wound healing. Therefore, in the current work, nanomaterials having drug releasing and antibacterial properties is coated onto the cotton gauze bandage to minimize the local pain and post-dressing infections at a wound site. We fabricated diclofenac sodium (an anti-inflammatory drug) loaded biodegradable, polycaprolactone (PCL) nanofibers mat through electrospinning and deposited it over the surface of a CGB that was initially coated by chitosan and decorated with ZnO nanoparticles. Chitosan coating over the CGB provides the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Electrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications · Silk-based biomaterials and applications
