Aloe vera and copaiba oleoresin-loaded chitosan films for wound dressings: microbial permeation, cytotoxicity, and in vivo proof of concept
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Elsevier
Materia
Chitosan films Aloe vera Copaiba oleoresin Balb/c 3T3 clone A31 cell line Female adult rats Wound healing
Date
2023-01-26Referencia bibliográfica
Bianca P. Genesi... [et al.]. Aloe vera and copaiba oleoresin-loaded chitosan films for wound dressings: microbial permeation, cytotoxicity, and in vivo proof of concept, International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Volume 634, 2023, 122648, ISSN 0378-5173, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122648]
Sponsorship
Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) 2010/17721-4; Junta de Andalucia PT18 RT 3786 national funds from FCT-Funda? UIDP/04378/2020 UIDB/04378/2020 LA/P/0140/2020; Associate Laboratory Institute for HealthAbstract
Chitosan films are commonly used for wound dressing, provided that this polymer has healing, mucoadhesiveness
and antimicrobial properties. These properties can be further reinforced by the combination of chitosan with
polysaccharides and glycoproteins present in aloe vera, together with copaiba oleoresin’s pharmacological activity
attributed to sesquiterpenes. In this work, we developed chitosan films containing either aloe vera, copaiba
oil or both, by casting technique, and evaluated their microbial permeation, antimicrobial activity, cytotoxicity,
and in vivo healing potential in female adult rats. None of the developed chitosan films promoted microbial
permeation, while the cytotoxicity in Balb/c 3 T3 clone A31 cell line revealed no toxicity of films produced with
2 % of chitosan and up to 1 % of aloe vera and copaiba oleoresin. Films obtained with either 0.5 % chitosan or
0.5 % copaiba oleoresin induced cell proliferation which anticipate their potential for closure of wound and for
the healing process. The in vivo results confirmed that tested films (0.5 % copaiba-loaded chitosan film and 0.5 %
aloe vera-loaded chitosan film) were superior to a commercial dressing film. For all tested groups, a fully formed
epithelium was seen, while neoformation of vessels seemed to be greater in formulations-treated groups than
those treated with the control. Our work confirms the added value of combining chitosan with aloe vera and
copaiba oil in the healing process of wounds.