Alleviating hypoxia through self-generating oxygen and hydrogen peroxide fluorinated chitosan: Insights from a kinetic study

[Display omitted] •Chitosan modified with PFCs to design self O2 generating and carrying biomaterials.•PFC-chitosan controlled the initial O2 burst release.•PFC-chitosan increased the solubility of generated O2 in the release media.•The kinetic of O2 changed with temperature, pH, and the initial amo...

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Published inChemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Vol. 473; p. 145072
Main Authors Ghaffari-Bohlouli, Pejman, Alimoradi, Houman, Freitas Siqueira Petri, Denise, Moghassemi, Saeid, Amorim, Christiani A., Nie, Lei, Shavandi, Amin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.10.2023
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Chitosan modified with PFCs to design self O2 generating and carrying biomaterials.•PFC-chitosan controlled the initial O2 burst release.•PFC-chitosan increased the solubility of generated O2 in the release media.•The kinetic of O2 changed with temperature, pH, and the initial amount of CaO2.•Controlled O2 from the PFC-chitosan improved cell viability. Effective methods to alleviate hypoxia are necessary for the proper healing of chronic wounds. However, current oxygen (O2) delivery methods suffer from limitations, such as low O2 capacity and short supply time, burst release, and inadequate O2 preservation potential. This study presents a new approach utilising fluorinated chitosan (PFC-chitosan) infused with self-generating and preserving O2 and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). We incorporated calcium peroxide (CaO2)-loaded polycaprolactone (PCL) particles into the PFC-chitosan matrix and subsequently evaluated the release kinetics of O2 and H2O2 from these materials. The incorporation of CaO2 into PCL particles and PFC-chitosan effectively mitigate the rapid decomposition rate of CaO2 while the PFC groups enable the dissolution of generated O2 via Van der Waals interactions. The apparent rate constant (kO2) for O2 release from CaO2 under hypoxia decreased from 1.194 µM−1h−1 to 0.141 µM−1h−1 by incorporating into PCL particles and PFC-chitosan, indicating the slower release of O2 from these materials. Regarding release kinetics, H2O2 follows a pseudo-zero-order pattern, while O2 exhibits a pseudo-first-order pattern. The kO2 is affected by temperature, pH, initial O2 concentration in the release media, and an initial amount of CaO2. The particles with PFC-chitosan showed higher cell viability and slower O2 release rates, indicating improved angiogenesis potential. The simultaneous generation of O2 and H2O2 from PFC-chitosan may have the potential to improve chronic wound healing by providing a continuous supplying of O2.
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2023.145072