Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities
Chronic wounds are the result of disruptions in the body's usual process of healing. They are not only a source of significant pain and discomfort but also, more importantly, an unguarded port of entry for pathogens into the body. While our current understanding of this phenomenon is far from c...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1416752023-07-14T15:48:10Z Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities Kathawala, Mustafa Hussain Ng, Wei Long Liu, Dan Naing, May Win Yeong, Wai Yee Spiller, Kara L. Van Dyke, Mark Ng, Kee Woei School of Materials Science and Engineering School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Environmental Chemistry & Materials Centre Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Singapore Centre for 3D Printing Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology Engineering::Materials Biomaterials Biologics Chronic wounds are the result of disruptions in the body's usual process of healing. They are not only a source of significant pain and discomfort but also, more importantly, an unguarded port of entry for pathogens into the body. While our current understanding of this phenomenon is far from complete, findings in physiological patterns and advancements in wound healing technologies have helped develop wound management and healing solutions to this long-standing medical challenge. This review presents an overview of known wound healing mechanics, abnormalities that lead to chronic wounds, and a summary of established and new wound healing technologies. Various approaches to heal wounds are discussed, from dermal replacements to advanced biomaterial-based treatments, from cell-, synthetic-, and composite-based approaches to preclinical approaches, which make developing such products possible. While tested breakthrough products are described, the authors focused more on recently developed innovations, which are at varying stages of maturity. The review concludes with a note on future perspectives and opinions on where the field and industry are headed and where they should be. ASTAR (Agency for Sci., Tech. and Research, S’pore) Accepted version 2020-06-10T02:34:15Z 2020-06-10T02:34:15Z 2019 Journal Article Kathawala, M. H., Ng, W. L., Liu, D., Naing, M. W., Yeong, W. Y., Spiller, K. L., . . . Ng, K. W. (2019). Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities. Tissue Engineering Part B: Reviews, 25(5), 429-444. doi:10.1089/ten.teb.2019.0019 1937-3368 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141675 10.1089/ten.teb.2019.0019 31068101 5 25 429 444 en Tissue Engineering Part B: Reviews © 2019 Mary Ann Liebert. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Tissue Engineering Part B: Reviews and is made available with permission of Mary Ann Liebert. Final publication is available from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers https://doi.org/10.1089/ten.TEB.2019.0019 application/pdf |
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Engineering::Materials Biomaterials Biologics Kathawala, Mustafa Hussain Ng, Wei Long Liu, Dan Naing, May Win Yeong, Wai Yee Spiller, Kara L. Van Dyke, Mark Ng, Kee Woei Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
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Chronic wounds are the result of disruptions in the body's usual process of healing. They are not only a source of significant pain and discomfort but also, more importantly, an unguarded port of entry for pathogens into the body. While our current understanding of this phenomenon is far from complete, findings in physiological patterns and advancements in wound healing technologies have helped develop wound management and healing solutions to this long-standing medical challenge. This review presents an overview of known wound healing mechanics, abnormalities that lead to chronic wounds, and a summary of established and new wound healing technologies. Various approaches to heal wounds are discussed, from dermal replacements to advanced biomaterial-based treatments, from cell-, synthetic-, and composite-based approaches to preclinical approaches, which make developing such products possible. While tested breakthrough products are described, the authors focused more on recently developed innovations, which are at varying stages of maturity. The review concludes with a note on future perspectives and opinions on where the field and industry are headed and where they should be. |
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School of Materials Science and Engineering |
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School of Materials Science and Engineering Kathawala, Mustafa Hussain Ng, Wei Long Liu, Dan Naing, May Win Yeong, Wai Yee Spiller, Kara L. Van Dyke, Mark Ng, Kee Woei |
format |
Article |
author |
Kathawala, Mustafa Hussain Ng, Wei Long Liu, Dan Naing, May Win Yeong, Wai Yee Spiller, Kara L. Van Dyke, Mark Ng, Kee Woei |
author_sort |
Kathawala, Mustafa Hussain |
title |
Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
title_short |
Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
title_full |
Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
title_fullStr |
Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
title_full_unstemmed |
Healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
title_sort |
healing of chronic wounds : an update of recent developments and future possibilities |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141675 |
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1772827555379806208 |