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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nanofiber dressings speed skin burn and cut healing in dogs by 50%

By Gholipour-Kanani, Adeleh et al.·Published in IET nanobiotechnology·2018·Department of Textile Engineering·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Poly (ɛ-caprolactone)-chitosan-poly (vinyl alcohol) nanofibrous scaffolds for skin excisional and burn wounds in a canine model.

Species:
dog
Skin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

Five dogs with skin wounds from burns or cuts were treated with a special blend of materials called PCL: Cs: PVA (polycaprolactone, chitosan, and polyvinyl alcohol) to help speed up healing. After 21 days, the wounds treated with these nanofibrous scaffolds showed much better healing compared to untreated wounds. The study found that these scaffolds not only helped the wounds heal faster but also did not cause any immune reactions in the dogs. This suggests that this new treatment could be a promising option for helping dogs recover from serious skin injuries.

People also search for: dog burn wound treatment · dog skin wound healing · PCL scaffolds for dog wounds

Abstract

Poly (ɛ-caprolactone)-chitosan-poly (vinyl alcohol) (PCL: Cs: PVA) nanofibrous blend scaffolds were known as useful materials for skin wound healing and would help the healing process about 50% faster at the final time point. From the previous studies by the authors, PCL: Cs: PVA (in 2: 1: 1.5 mass ratio) nanofibres showed high efficacy in healing on rat models. In this study, the scaffolds were examined in burn and excision wounds healing on dogs as bigger models. The scaffolds were applied on dorsum skin wounds ( = 5) then macroscopic and microscopic investigations were carried out to measure the wounds areas and to track healing rate, respectively. Macroscopic results showed good aspect healing effect of scaffolds compared with control wounds especially after 21 days post-operating for both cutting and burn wounds. Pathological studies showed that the healing rates of the wounds covered with PCL: Cs: PVA nanofibrous scaffolds were much rapid compared to untreated wounds in control group. The immunogenicity of the scaffolds in canine model was also investigated. The findings showed that nanofibrous blend scaffolds was not immunogenic in humoural immune responses. All these results indicated that PCL: Cs: PVA nanofibrous web could be considered as promising materials for wounds healings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30095423/