Hydrogel tissue adhesive for medical use
First Claim
1. A method for applying a coating to an anatomical site on tissue of a living organism comprising the steps of applying to the sitea) at least one aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide containing pendant aldehyde groups attached to the carbohydrate of said aldehyde-polysaccharide via one of the ring hydroxyl groups, said aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide having a weight-average molecular weight of about 1,000 to about 1,000,000 Daltons and a degree of aldehyde substitution of about 10% to about 200%;
- followed byb) at least one water-dispersible, multi-arm amine wherein at least three of the arms are terminated by at least one primary amine group, said multi-arm amine having a number-average molecular weight of about 450 to about 200,000 Daltons, or (b) followed by (a), or premixing (a) and (b) and applying the resulting mixture to the site before the resulting mixture completely cureswhereinthe polysaccharide rings of said at least one aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide have not undergone cleavage via oxidation to introduce aldehyde groups; and
combination of a) and b) in a solvent yields a hydrogel having an aqueous solution degradation time, as measured by percent swelling, less than the degradation time of a hydrogel prepared with an oxidized polysaccharide that is oxidized by cleavage of the polysaccharide rings to introduce groups in place of said aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide containing pendant aldehyde groups while maintaining comparable gelation time.
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Abstract
A hydrogel tissue adhesive formed by reacting an aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide containing pendant aldehyde groups with a water-dispersible, multi-arm amine is described. The hydrogel may be useful as a tissue adhesive or sealant for medical applications that require a more rapid degradation time, such as the prevention of undesired tissue-to tissue adhesions resulting from trauma or surgery.
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Citations
3 Claims
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1. A method for applying a coating to an anatomical site on tissue of a living organism comprising the steps of applying to the site
a) at least one aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide containing pendant aldehyde groups attached to the carbohydrate of said aldehyde-polysaccharide via one of the ring hydroxyl groups, said aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide having a weight-average molecular weight of about 1,000 to about 1,000,000 Daltons and a degree of aldehyde substitution of about 10% to about 200%; - followed by
b) at least one water-dispersible, multi-arm amine wherein at least three of the arms are terminated by at least one primary amine group, said multi-arm amine having a number-average molecular weight of about 450 to about 200,000 Daltons, or (b) followed by (a), or premixing (a) and (b) and applying the resulting mixture to the site before the resulting mixture completely cures wherein the polysaccharide rings of said at least one aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide have not undergone cleavage via oxidation to introduce aldehyde groups; and combination of a) and b) in a solvent yields a hydrogel having an aqueous solution degradation time, as measured by percent swelling, less than the degradation time of a hydrogel prepared with an oxidized polysaccharide that is oxidized by cleavage of the polysaccharide rings to introduce groups in place of said aldehyde-functionalized polysaccharide containing pendant aldehyde groups while maintaining comparable gelation time. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3)
- followed by
Specification