Wound Healing: Traditional plant based and Modern wound dressing-An update

Raju K. Chalannavar 1 , Divakar MS 2, Atin Kumar 3, Ravindra B. Malabadi 1, 4, *, Swathi 1, Avinash A. Kamble 5, Kishore S. Karamchand 6, Kiran P. Kolkar 7, Somayyeh Moramazi 8, Antonia Neidilê Ribeiro Munhoz 9 and Karen Viviana Castaño Coronado 10

1 Department of Applied Botany, Mangalore University, Mangalagangotri-574199, Mangalore, Karnataka State, India.
2 Food Science and Nutrition, Department of Biosciences, Mangalore University, Mangalagangotri- 574199, Karnataka State, India.
3 School of Agriculture, Uttaranchal University, Dehradun-248007, Uttarakhand State, India.
4Miller Blvd, NW, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
5 Department of Industrial Chemistry, Mangalore University, Mangalagangotri- 574199, Karnataka State, India.
6 Department of Zoology, Poornaprajna College, Autonomous, Udupi- 576101, Karnataka State, India.
7 Department of Botany, Karnatak Science College, Dharwad-580003, Karnataka State, India.
8 Department of Horticulture Science and Agronomy, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran-1477893855, Iran.
9 Department of Chemistry, Environment and Food, Federal Institute of Amazonas, Campus Manaus Centro, Amazonas-69020-120, Brazil.
10 Chief Communications Officer (CCO), Research Issues and CO-Founder of LAIHA (Latin American Industrial Hemp Association), and CEO- CANNACONS, Bogota, D.C., Capital District, Colombia.
 
 
Review
International Journal of Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences Archive, 2025, 09(02), 044-066.
Article DOI: 10.53771/ijbpsa.2025.9.2.0039
Publication history: 
Received on 02 March 2025; revised on 10 April 2025; accepted on 13 April 2025
 
Abstract: 
Wound healing is a long expensive process and represent a major burden to patients, healthcare providers and healthcare systems. There are many risk factors, such as age, malnutrition, infections, smoking, medications or radiation, associated with improper wound healing. Wound dressings are divided into traditional plant based or conventional dressings (such as cotton gauze, bandages, lint, plasters) and modern multifunctional dressings (such as foams, films, bio-plymers based, hydrocolloids, hydrogels, nanocomposites). Conventional dressings are known as passive wound dressings and are useful to cover and stabilize modern wound dressings. In a traditional Indian Ayurvedic system of medicine, plants and plant-based constituents have been extensively used for the treatment and management of different types of wounds. Traditional healers are significant for public health in Indian rural communities, and many individuals have confidence in the healing attributes of herbal medicine. The wound healing remedies from Ayurveda are safe and gentle on the body. The Ayurvedic treatment of wound healing suggested the use of herbal formulations. Therefore, plant constituent based wound dressings are very effective treatment in the management of wound healing process. Plants contain many natural bioactive compounds that help to fasten the process of wound healing and regenerate tissue at the wound site. Hydrogels are considered as ideal wound dressings because they mimic the skin structure, promoting the growth factor synthesis and autolysis process. It was stated that biofilms impact chronic wound healing by delaying the inflammatory and maturation phases. NFC-based hydrogels can be used in advanced wound care applications. Nanoparticles have been widely used as promising candidates for wound treatment. Nanotechnology offers excellent opportunities to address the problems of non- or slow-healing wounds, as wound healing solutions can be designed to be multifactorial and cell-type specific.
 
Keywords: 
Antimicrobial dressings; Antiseptic; Bacterial nanocellulose (BC); Biofilm; Chronic wounds; Nanoparticles; Nanocoatings; Plant cellulose (PC); Wound dressing
 
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