dressing nanofibrous mat is prepared incorporating Zataria multiflora nanoemulsion
into cellulose acetate/gelatine blend and using electrospinning technique to improve
wound management (Farahani et al. 2020). The fibre diameter increases with
increasing the cellulose acetate/gelatine ratio, while mechanical strength of the
fibre decreases with increasing the ratio. In vitro release study reveals a controlled
release kinetic of the herbal drug with increasing the gelatine content in the nanofibre
(Fig. 30.1b(i)). Further, the release kinetics from different nanofibres follows the
Korsmeyer-Peppas model with ‘n’ value below 0.45 indicating pseudo-Fickian
diffusion of the drug. The zone of inhibition study exhibits the nanofibre with 1:1
ratio of cellulose acetate/gelatine which shows better antibacterial activity than the
other systems against S. aureus and E. coli bacteria (Fig. 30.1b(ii)). Hence, the
nanofibre mats of cellulose acetate/gelatine incorporated with herbal drug have
potential as wound dressing material. The ‘panchavalkala’ (PV) a well-known
polyherb for wound management is incorporated into PLA film and nanofibre to
improve the efficacy of the polyherb. The incorporation of the polyherb increases the
fibre diameter of electrospun scaffold. Further, thermal stability increases, and
particle size decreases of the polyherb after incorporation into nanofibre. In vitro
release kinetics shows a controlled of the drug up to 80% continuously for 5 days
from the scaffold with an initial burst release from the scaffold, while a controlled
release of drug (45%) is observed for the film. The release kinetics follows Higuchi
model which indicates the release mechanism is highly diffusion controlled and the
initial burst release is due to large surface area of the electrospun scaffold. The cell
adhesion, cell viability and cell imaging studies with 3T3 fibroblast cell line reveal
that the presence of the polyherb improves the cell attachment and proliferation over
the scaffold indicating the developed wound dressing is biocompatible in nature
(Fig. 30.1c). Further, the enzymatic degradation studies suggest the developed
dressing mats are biodegradable in nature (Biswas et al. 2018a). Generally, sponges
are porous and flexible in nature and are capable of absorbing huge amount of
exudates. These characteristics make sponges good wound dressing materials. The
sponge made of chitosan and gelatine is very effective in wound management
(Nguyen et al. 2013). The porous structure is evident through morphological inves-
tigation. The folding endurance and percentage of drug release increase with
increasing gelatine content, while water uptake increases with increasing the
chitosan content. A greater zone of inhibition against P. aeruginosa is observed
with curcumin-loaded sponge, and it increases with increasing chitosan content.
Further, the biocompatible nature of the sponge is evident from cytotoxicity
measurement.
30.5
Efficacy of Dressing Material (In Vivo Study)
The superiority of any dressing material with or without any bioactive materials can
be determined through in vivo animal studies. Generally, animals like rat, mice or
rabbits of any sex are chosen randomly for this purpose, and a full-thickness wound
(circular or square shape) is created with the permission of Animal Experimentation
30
Polymeric Vehicles for Controlled Delivery of Ayurvedic Drugs for Wound. . .
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