Antibacterial hydrogels for skin infected wounds: frontier approaches as antibiotic alternatives therapy
Xiangyang Li, Yueying Fan, Jinfu Li, Chao Yan, Peng Wang, Chiyu Jia

TL;DR
This paper reviews antibacterial hydrogels as a promising alternative to antibiotics for treating skin wound infections.
Contribution
The paper systematically categorizes and reviews antibacterial hydrogels based on their mechanisms and design strategies.
Findings
Antibacterial hydrogels can be classified into chemical, physical, and biological types based on their mechanisms.
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels offer new opportunities for precise and efficient antibacterial therapy.
The review highlights material selection and design strategies for optimizing next-generation hydrogels.
Abstract
Skin wound infections are common and clinically challenging. Conventional antibiotic therapies are increasingly ineffective because of escalating bacterial resistance, highlighting the urgent need for alternative treatment strategies. Antibacterial hydrogels, multifunctional polymeric materials that integrate moisturizing, drug delivery, controlled release, and wound-healing properties, have emerged as highly promising candidates for managing infected wounds. Based on their underlying antimicrobial mechanisms, these systems can be broadly classified into three main categories: chemical, physical, and biological antibacterial hydrogels, which achieve bactericidal efficacy through drug release, physical disruption, or modulation of the host microenvironment and immune responses, respectively. Of tremendous significance is the advent of stimuli-responsive intelligent hydrogels, which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Hydrogels: synthesis, properties, applications · Antimicrobial agents and applications
