IIT develops dressing for faster healing
NEW DELHI: Researchers from Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT-M) have developed an inexpensive wound dressing using a carbon allotrope and psyllium husk (isabgol) that accelerates healing of wounds in both healthy persons and diabetics.
Animal trials in rats show that the dressing heals wounds almost a week faster. The normal wounds treated with the dressings healed in 16 days compared to 23 days in untreated normal wounds, found researchers.
In people with diabetes, which affects 70 million Indians and growing, the dressings healed in 20 days compared to 26 days in untreated diabetic wounds.
“Wounds in people with diabetes heal slower than in healthy people, with the inflammation or the painful phase taking longer. This delays the formation of blood vessels and the cellular matrix, but the challenge is that we do not know why this hap-
WOUNDS TREATED WITH THE DRESSINGS HEALED IN 16 DAYS COMPARED TO 23 DAYS TAKEN BY WOUNDS NOT TREATED SPECIALLY
pens,” said Vignesh Muthuvijayan, one of the authors of the research paper and an assistant professor in the department of biotechnology at IIT-M.
For the new dressing material, the scientists used reduced graphene oxide, which is a thin sheet of graphite that has been reduced using intense sunlight. This is then mixed with a rubbery electrolysed isabgol to form woundhealing scaffolds. “Reduced graphene oxide is known for its electrical properties but the active biomedical properties have never been utilised. The material we have developed improves the blood vessel formation and helps in healing wounds faster,” said Muthuvijayan.