Premium
Chitosan/nanocellulose‐based bionanocomposite films for controlled betamethasone and silver sulfadiazine delivery
Author(s) -
Riccio Bruno Vincenzo Fiod,
Klosowski Ana Beatriz,
Prestes Eduardo,
Sousa Taynara Barbosa,
Assunção Morais Laís Caroline,
Lemes Bruna Mikulis,
Beltrame Flávio Luís,
Campos Patrícia Mazureki,
Ferrari Priscileila Colerato
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of applied polymer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.575
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-4628
pISSN - 0021-8995
DOI - 10.1002/app.50468
Subject(s) - nanocellulose , chitosan , silver sulfadiazine , antimicrobial , materials science , drug delivery , nanotechnology , sulfadiazine , controlled release , chitin , wound dressing , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , wound healing , antibiotics , composite material , medicine , cellulose , surgery , organic chemistry , biology
Bionanocomposite films based on chitosan and nanocellulose (nanocrystals or nanofibrils) have gained considerable attention for biomedical applications, especially for wound dressings. However, the development of these films as controlled drug release dressings is still under‐exploited. Therefore, this work aimed to design chitosan/nanocellulose‐based bionanocomposite films, loaded by betamethasone or silver sulfadiazine, as functional dressings. The films were obtained by solvent casting and characterized by physicochemical, mechanical, barrier properties, in vitro drug release, and antimicrobial activity. The nanocellulose type, physical state, and content caused influence on the film's properties providing different physical, barrier, and drug release profiles. They are semi‐occlusive and mechanically resistant; the drug release is controlled, and possesses antimicrobial activity. In conclusion, the developed biodegradable bionanocomposite films are promising as active dressings for controlled drug delivery in the wound site and have specific applications according to their features to treat inflamed and purulent wounds, non‐infectious dry wounds, and infectious wounds.