This invention relates to a method and an apparatus for preparing polysaccharide staple microfibers, wound covers based on the microfibers, and the method of their preparation.
Treatment of skin defects, and acute, or chronic wounds is a very important part of the modern medicine. This also relates to the increasing age of population being treated with the use of more and more modern procedures. Wound healing is a very complicated process which is nowadays studied intensively. Even though the partial steps of the healing process are known, the whole complex is still undiscovered. Nowadays the wet healing is preferred, based on supplying the humidity from the dressing, and using the regulated drainage of the tissue fluid. Use of a vacuum pump with the low pressure is also modern. During the last 10 years, the system based on the utilization of biological and physical properties of the hyaluronic acid has been prepared. Especially in combination with an appropriate antimicrobial agent, its action in the location of the healing wound is ensured. So far, experience with this therapy has been positive, and the advantageousness of the antiadhesive, hydrophilic, and healing properties of the hyaluronan-iodine complex has been proved in many papers.
The wound covers can be further improved by utilization of biopolymers spinning. With the use of this method, a large surface acting on the contact wound surface, better contacting of the cells taking part in the healing with the active substances bound to the fibers, the dressing structure improving the properties of the extracellular matrix of the tissue being healed, and the right circulation of the tissue fluid will be ensured.
The staple fibers can be processed into the so-called staple yarns or they can be successfully processed into nonwoven textiles. The nonwoven textiles usually present a continuous layer of staple fibers where the primary fibers are arranged randomly. In contrast to the conventional textiles (prepared by weaving, knitting, crocheting), the unwoven textile is based on a web of these randomly arranged fibers which can be both short and long. This layer-forming nonwoven textile can be compact and paper-like, or it can represent a porous and “fluffy” structure. The layer thickness (nonwoven textile) is usually from 25 μm to several centimeters. The layer weight is therefore from about 5 g/m2 to 1 kg/m2. The mechanical properties (nonwoven textile), such as the tear strength, bending strength, and the like, are given by the primary fibers strength, and also by adhesive and physical and chemical forces between the individual fibers, which are crossed randomly (Encyclopedia of Textiles, Fibers, and Nonwoven Fabrics, Encyclopedia Reprint Series, Ed. Martin Grayson, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1984).
As regards the fibers themselves, they can be classified as conventional fibers, microfibers and nanofibers. The microfibers are defined as the fibers with the sheerness bellow 1 dtex, i.e. the weight of a fiber of 1 000 m long is below 0.1 g. The nanofibers are characterized with their diameter of units to hundreds nanometers, due to their character their sheerness in decitexes is not determined. Unwoven textiles can be prepared from all types of these fibers. As regards the chemical nature of the primary fibers, they can be both natural and synthetic fibers. It is obvious that an unwoven textile can be prepared by mechanical mixing of various fibers of different sheerness or chemical nature. It is also possible to combine a conventional textile (woven textile, knitted textile, and the like) with a nonwoven textile, i.e. a layer of the nonwoven textile is “applied” on the conventional textile. These combinations are used in the cases where e.g. enhancement of the mechanical properties of the final product is demanded, or a “multi-layer” material is desired, or a combination of polymers, where a final product has a particular function, for example it stimulates wound healing and the like, is concerned. The reason for “mixing” various polymers (fibers) can be also economical (a combination of expensive and cheap fibers), especially in case of the so-called functional textiles.
Interestingly, in the past the term microfibers was related to the synthetic fibers, especially polyester, and polyamide. The techniques of producing staple fibers from synthetic polymer melt can be found e.g. in the publication Nakajima T, Kajiwara K, McIntyre J E, 1994. Advanced fiber Spinning Technology. Woodhead Publishing.
Microfibers or nanofibers can be, in general, prepared from a polymer solution by various techniques. Probably the most sophisticated one is the so-called electrospinning, or spinning in a strong electrical field (5 to 50 kV), where a polymer solution (or a melt, in case of synthetic polymers) is injected via a thin nozzle (needle) into electrostatic field, where the nozzle and the collector are connected to a voltage source. A polymer droplet flowing out of the nozzle is stretched by this field, and that leads to the production of a nano- or microfiber, with a solvent evaporating at the same time. We can say that the number of publications discussing the electrospinning increases exponentially during the time (D. Li, Y. Xia. Electro spinning of Nanofibers: Reinventing the Wheel?. Advanced Materials. 2004, 16, 1151-1170).
The microfibers from, in general, biopolymers, can be obtained also by a strong mechanical action on a “raw” starting natural material. For example, the microfibrillated cellulose (MFC) can be prepared by microfluidization technique from a wood substance (the preparation of MFC is described for example in J. Y. Zhu et al, Green Chem., 2011, 13, 1339).
Another method to obtain the microfibers from biopolymers (sodium alginate, starch, keratin) is described in the publications from Polish authors (Dariusz Wawro a kol., Microfibrids from Natural Polymers', Fibres & Textiles in Eastern Europe, v. 10, No. 3/2002 (38), pp. 23-26, 2002), where the principle lies in the use of non-stationary coagulation bath. There is a principle of a stream of a polymer solution coming out of a nozzle being driven by a stream, preferably perpendicular, of the coagulation bath. This leads to the fibrillation and microfibers formation. However, there is a disadvantage of the fibers prepared by this process being very short, according to the said document their length is maximum 800 μm, so they form a hardly processable pulp. The same author described the preparation of chitosan microfibers by the same method (Dariusz Wawro a kol., Fibres & Textiles in Eastern Europe (2006), 14(3), 97-101.).
The use of nonstationary coagulation bath is described in the U.S. Pat. No. 5,868,973 (1999) ‘Process and apparatus for producing fibers from cellulose derivatives’. The prepared microfibers are also very short.
Hyaluronic acid (A) has a chemical structure of a linear polyelectrolyte composed of repeatedly altering units of β-(1,3)-D-glucuronic acid and β-(1,4)-N-acetyl-D-glukosamine repeating continually and creating (−4GlcUAβ1-3GlcNAcβ1-)n long chains. Every repeating unit has one carboxyl group, four hydroxyl groups, and an acetamide group.
Primary and secondary hydroxyl groups are moderately acidic, and they can be ionized by alkali ionization, for example by sodium hydroxide, where, however, pKa is above the value of 14. The carboxyl group belongs to a group of medium acids neutralized by alkali into salts, hylauronates, e.g. sodium hyaluronate. The mixture of a salt and a free acid is referred to as hyaluronan. For example, pKa of the free form of hyaluronic acid in water varies around 3.45, in 0.2M NaCl it is 2.95 (L. Lap{hacek over (c)}ik et al.: Chemické listy 85, 281-298, 1991). Hyaluronic acid is characterized by a high molecular weight of 5.104 to 5.106 g·mol−1, depending on the source from which it has been obtained. This polysaccharide is water soluble within the whole pH range, in the form of a salt. The hyaluronic acid is a unique biopolymer intended for therapeutic applications acknowledged as a versatile surface material improving the biocompatibility of remedies. A review can be found for example in the publication (S. Dumitriu, Polysaccharides: Structural diversity and functional versatility, Marcel Dekker Inc. 1998, ISBN 0824701275).
Hyaluronic acid, more specifically hylauronan, has a beneficial effect on wound healing. This is due to its physical, chemical, and biological properties. The polymer is a strong hydrophile, ensuring therefore a good transportation of a tissue fluid, and favourable rheological properties in the location of the healing wound, it prevents its drying, and simultaneously prevents serious adhesion of the bandage to the wound. The biological properties of hyaluronan are associated with its influence on inflammation processes, new vascular tubes formation, bonding on lymphatic vessels, and cell receptors (CD 44 receptors) stimulation. All these effects improve healing of wounds and skin defects (Sobotka L, Smahelova A, Pastorova J, Kusalova M.: A case report of the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers using a sodium hyaluronate and iodine complex.
Int J Low Extrem Wounds. 2007 September; 6(3):143-7. And Cutting K F: Wound healing through synergy of hyaluronan and an iodine complex. J Wound Care. 2011 September; 20(9):424, 426, 428-30).
Chitin (B1) is the second most common polysaccharide found in the nature. It consists of repeating β-(1,4)-N-acetyl glukosamine units. It is water insoluble, soluble in organic solvents such as hexafluoro isopropanole, hexafluro acetone, chlorinated alcohols conjugated with aqueous solutions of mineral acids, and N,N-dimethylacetamide containing 5% of lithium salts (M. N. V. Ravi Kumar, Reactive and Functional Polymers 46 (2000) 1-27).
Chitosan (B2) is a form of chitin, where at least 50% of β-(1,4)-N-acetyl glukosamine units are deacetylated. Its properties are influenced by the degree of deacetylation (ratio of acetylated to deacetylated units). This cationic polysaccharide is water soluble at acidic pH levels lower than pKa of chitosan (pKa 6.5). Chitin and chitosan are commercially obtained from seashells (crabs, lobsters, crayfish), or by extraction of the cell walls of certain fungi.
Both these polysaccharides are of wide industrial use, for example in water treatment, in cosmetics as an additive to soaps and shampoos, or in medicine for preparation of bandages intended to ensure wound hydration in the so-called wet healing (Dai T, Tanaka M, Huang Y Y, Hamblin M R: Chitosan preparations for wounds and burns: antimicrobial and wound-healing effects. Expert Rev Anti Infect Ther. 2011, July; 9(7):857-79). Chitin and chitosan are also used for production of skin substitutes (Tseng H J, Tsou T L, Wang H J, Hsu S H.: Characterization of chitosan-gelatin scaffolds for dermal tissue engineering. J Tissue Eng Regen Med. 2011 Oct. 28. doi: 10.1002).
The said polysaccharides have substantial sequestration effects (they are capable to bond metal ions). Chitosan is renewable and biodegradable, and at the same time it has also an antibacterial effect (N. Liu et al., Carbohydrate Polymers 2004; 64; 60-65). Its salts with organic (lactate, acetate, glycolate, succinate) and mineral acids (hydrochloride) are water soluble, and at the same time they have haemostatic effect, which can be also related to the ability of bonding haemocoagulative molecules.
Chitin/chitosan-glucan complex is obtained from the mycelium of certain fungi species (Aspergillus sp., Penicillium sp., Schizophyllum commune). It is a mixture of chitin/chitosan and β-(1,3)-D-glucan which are joined with a glycosidic bond. The weight ratio of chitin/chitosan and glucan is from 0.001:99.99 to 99.99:0.01. This polysaccharide can be in the form of a pharmacologically acceptable salt—lactate, glycolate, acetate, succinate, hydrochloride.
Chitin/chitosan-glucan complex can have a beneficial effect on healing due to an immunomodulative effect of glucan. In addition, it can entrap humidity in the defect area, and therefore ensure the so-called wet healing.
Schizophylan (D) is an extracellular polysaccharide produced by the fungi Schizophyllan commune ATCC 38548. This neutral polysaccharide consists of the chain of β-(1,3)-D-glucopyranose units, where β-(1,6)-D-glucopyranose is bonded on every third β-(1,3)-D-glucopyranose unit, and the molecule forms a triple helix. Its molecular weight varies within the range of 6-12×106 g·mol−1. In dimethylsulfoxide, at the temperatures above 120° C. or pH above 12, untwisting of triple helix occurs and the molecule is then formed by single chains, which leads to a decrease of the molecular weight by ⅓ (U. Rau, Methods in Biotechnology, 1999, Volume 10, 43-55, DOI: 10.1007/978-1-59259-261-6—4). This polysaccharide is degraded in a mammal body, and it has many remedial and immunomodulative effects (Wakshull, Immunopharmacology 41 (1999) 89-107).
Xanthan (E) is a water-soluble polysaccharide produced by Xanthomonas campestris bacteria, and the most frequently it is used as a food additive (Davidson, Robert L. (1980). Handbook of Water-soluble Gums and Resins. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0070154716).
Alginate (F), or the alginic acid, is also a water-soluble anionic polysaccharide which strongly absorbs moisture. The production thereof can be found in (Remminghorst and Rehm (2009). “Microbial Production of Alginate: Biosynthesis and Applications”. Microbial Production of Biopolymers and Polymer Precursors. Caister Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-904455-36-3). Because of its capability of water entrapping in the location of a wound, alginate is widely used in the cases of the need of wound moisturizing and ensuring the decomposition and gradual dissolving of necrotic tissues. It is often combined with antimicrobial agents.
Oxycellulose is a cellulose derivative where a part of —CH2—OH groups is oxidized into —COOH groups. Oxycellulose water-solubility depends on the content of carboxyl groups. The solubility of almost 100% is achieved when the —COOH groups content is above 20%. Desired haemostatic effects are achieved within the range of 16 to 19% of COOH.
Carboxymethyl cellulose (G) is a synthetic cellulose derivative, and it is an anionic polysaccharide, often used in the form of a sodium salt which is water soluble. It is also a food additive (Sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (Cellulose gum). Codex Alimentarius. 2009).
Many biopolymers have the disadvantage of non-fusibility (their melting point is above their decomposition temperature). For spinning, especially for the purpose of nonwoven textiles production, it is not possible to use progressive technologies of fiber production, such as “spunbond” (i.e. direct application of a fiber formed form a melt by a nozzle onto an endless belt where a web layer—the base of the nonwoven textile—is formed), or “meltblown” (i.e. the polymer melt leaving the nozzle is entrained with a hot air flow, which helps to form a characteristic type of the fiber as a base of a nonwoven textile).
As the polysaccharides do not flux, the method called wet spinning is used for preparing the fibers. A polysaccharide dissolved in an appropriate solvent is extruded through various types of nozzles (circular or slot nozzle, or a nozzle with various profiles—radial, spherical triangle, and the like) directly into a non-solvent (precipitation bath), where a fiber or a film is formed. The description of the wet spinning method can be found for example in T. P. Nevell, S. H. Zeronian: Cellulose Chemistry and its Applications. John Wiley & Sons 1985, p. 455-479. Or: J. E. McIntyre: The Chemistry of Fibres. Edward Arnold, London 1971, p. 15.
The wet spinning method can be modified into the so-called dry-wet spinning. It is used, for example, for spinning of certain types of aromatic polyamides or fibers from regenerated cellulose of the Tencell, Lyocell types, and the like. The principle of dry-wet spinning consists in that a stream of a polymer solution leaving the nozzle passes through an air gap before its entering into the precipitation bath, this gap has a length from a few millimeters to a few centimeters (this technique is described e.g. in documents WO 2000/063470, DE 10331342, JP 2008208480). The dry-wet spinning technique has been originally used for spinning of hyaluronan in the document (Burgert L., et al., PV 2010-1001).
There are known methods of spinning of hyaluronic acid into a fiber, for example A. Rupprecht (Acta Chem. Scand., B33, No. 10, 1979) spun the potassium salt of hyaluronic acid in 75-80% ethanol comprising 0.1M KCl, he coiled the fibers into a disc, so the fibers aglutinated by drying into a film comprising a “spatially orientated” hyaluronic acid. This way of spinning naturally did not lead to fibers processable in the textile industry.
Further, E. D. T. Atkins et al. (Biochem. J. 128, 1255-1263, 1972) prepared model fibers from hyaluronic acid and sodium hyaluronate in such a way that first they prepared a film which they cut into thin strips. For these “model fibers” cut from films (and drawn) they determined a crystal modification with the use of X-ray structural analysis, including the dimensions of an elementary crystal cell. They found out that the elementary cell of a non-drawn sodium hyaluronate fiber was of a hexagonal crystal system and the macromolecules were arranged antiparallely supposing the hydrogen bonds between amide groups of acetylated glucosamine. Base dimension: a=1.17 nm (or 2.02 nm). Macromolecule profile diameter approx. 0.673 nm. Dimension c of the elementary cell (along the fiber axis) was 2.85 nm.
They have also found that conditioning of sodium hyaluronate based fibers at 60° C. and relative humidity of 75% lead to the formation of a new hexagonal crystal lattice, a=1.87 nm, maintaining c=2.85 nm. The change of the lattice type (with maintaining the crystal modification) is also known in cases of other fibers—polymers—e.g. cellulose in the cotton fiber.
The same author determined the monoclinic crystal system with the elementary cell dimension of a=1.96 nm (but it is not fully defined) at the fibers prepared from hyaluronic acid (acid form).
The document WO 2009/050389 describes the preparation of a yarn with the use of wet spinning method, where this yarn comprises hyaluronic acid in the acid form, acetic acid, and it is partially water soluble. The preparation of a fiber consists of the following steps: a) preparation of an aqueous solution of hyaluronic acid, or a salt thereof, preferably sodium salt, where the hyaluronic acid concentration is higher than 0.8%, preferably within the range of 1 to 2% by weight; b) extrusion of the solution through the nozzle into a spinning bath; c) forming the fiber in the bath, which consists of acetic acid and water, where the acetic acid concentration is higher than 80%, preferably higher than 90%, the most preferably 99%. The obtained yarn has a diameter higher than 100 μm. The authors of this document declare that the fibers prepared by their procedure can be used for both the woven and nonwoven textiles. In fact, due to their small strength (according to the comparative example 10, the tearing occurs at the stress of 67 MPa), the fibers are not applicable for the preparation of woven fabric or knitted fabric, so they are applicable for preparation of nonwoven textiles only. The strengths of textile fibers produced in a conventional manner vary within the following intervals: cellulose fibers 1.8 to 2.7 cN·dtext−1; synthetic fibers above 4 cN·dtext−1; coefficient of variation up to 10%. Loop (knot) strength of the fiber should be approximately 80% of the fiber strength without deformation. It applies especially to weaving, knitting, and bobbin lace work. For non-woven textiles, the loop strength of the fiber is not essential.
The above mentioned document PV 2010-1001 describes the preparation of fibers comprising the hyaluronic acid characterized in that the fiber consists of hyaluronic acid and/or at least one compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions, wherein the fiber can optionally comprise metal salts originating from the production process, having the molecular weight of macromolecules within the range of 100 kDa to 3 MDa. The prepared fibers are characterized by that the fiber (monophile, primary fiber) diameter is 4 μm to 1 mm, length weight 0.1 to 30 g/1000 m (0.1 to 30 tex), tensile strength 0.5 to 3 cN·dtex-1, and loop strength 20 to 80% of tensile strength. The solution is characterized also by the preparation of silk tow comprising 2 to 50 primary fibers. Therefore it concerns the fibers with properties useful for the production of both woven and nonwoven textiles.
The preparation of chitin fibers via the wet spinning method from chitin solution is described for example in the U.S. Pat. No. 1,029,727 (1977), where chitosan is dissolved in trichloroacetic acid, and the fibers of high strength are prepared by the wet spinning method.
The Japanese document (OPI) No. 127500/1978 describes a similar method differing only in that chitin is dissolved in dichloroacetic acid. The prepared fiber has a lower strength than when using the method employing trichloroacetic acid.
The U.S. Pat. No. 3,988,411 (1976) uses hexafluoro isopropyl alcohol or hexafluoro acetone sesquihydrate to dissolve chitin. Acetone is used as the coagulation bath.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,029,727 (1977) uses mixtures of trichloroacetic acid or dichloroacetic acid, chloral hydrate, and halogenated hydrocarbon (e.g. CCl4) to dissolve chitin. Acetone is used as the coagulation bath, then the fibers are neutralized with alkalis, washed with 2-propanol, and dried.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,431,601 (1984) uses mixtures of trichloroacetic acid and halogenated hydrocarbon (e.g. CCl4) to dissolve chitin. Acetone is used as the first coagulation bath, and methanol is used as the second coagulation bath. The produced fibers are useful as surgical sutures. The U.S. Pat. No. 4,932,404 (1990) describes a very similar method.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,857,403 describes the preparation of tough fibers of “chitin acetate/formate” and “chitosan acetate/formate”. In fact, it concerns a method where the derivatives of chitin and chitosan are prepared first (by O-acylation and N-acylation), and then they are spun by a conventional method. The problem of this patent is that the procedure with chitosan comprises dissolving chitosan (40 g) in formic acid, then adding the ice cold acetic acid, and anhydride (500 ml). The mixture is agitated for 12 hours at 0° C. At these given conditions, the rate of acetylation of chitosan amide groups, and therefore the conversion of chitosan to chitin, is questionable. N-acetyl and O-acetyl chitin and chitosin derivatives are herein called acetates. Another problem, naturally, is that the amine group protonizes by acid treatment to give the respective salts (—NH2+CH3COOH→—NH3+−OOCCH3). In the end, the resulting fibers are O-acyled and N-acyled chitine and chitosane derivatives. The following U.S. Pat. No. 4,861,527 (1989) tries to solve this problem relating to chitosan in that the fibers prepared by the methods of the previous patent are immersed into the concentrated aqueous solution of NaOH (50-70% by weight of NaOH). This induces O- and N-deacetylation, and also dissapearing of the amide groups and re-creation of —NH2 groups. However, the problem is that chitosan in its neutral form (amine groups are not protonized) does not have haemostatic and antimicrobial effects. Of course, it has a strong chelating effect.
The preparation of chitosan fibers by the wet spinning method from chitosan solution is described for example in the document (OPI) No. 112937/1981, where chitosan is dissolved in water at acidic conditions, the solution is filtrated and spun into the coagulation bath comprising anion surfactants.
The document (OPI) No. 116418/1984 describes dissolving of chitosan in water acidified with dichloroacetic acid. Further, this document describes chelation of metal ions by prepared fibers.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,464,321 (1984) describes a method of preparation of chitosan hollow fibers designed for ultrafiltrations, where an acidic chitosan solution is spun into an alkaline coagulation bath comprising a plastificator (glycerin). The interesting fact in this method is that the stream leaving the nozzle (designed for forming hollow fibers) passes through an ammonium atmosphere before its entrance into the coagulation bath. Therefore, it concerns a wet-dry spinning method.
The document (OPI) No. 106901/1988 describes a method, where chitosan is dissolved at 40° C. in water acidified by acetic acid, and thus the solution comprising 3% of chitosan and 0.5% of acetic acid is prepared. The solution is spun at 30° C. in the coagulation bath comprising aqueous 1% NaOH. The formed fibers are washed and dried. The fiber tensile strength is 2.44 g/denier, elongation at break 10.8%, and knot strength 1.77 SG/denier.
In the publication (Shigehiro Hirano a kol., Carbohydrate Polymers 38 (1999) 293-298) the preparation of staple chitosan fibers, which are in addition plastified by ethylene glycol is described.
The essential problem of pure chitosan consists in that, according to our experiences, these fibers have a small strength and are fragile. Another problem is that chitosan acidic aqueous solutions are logically spun into an alkaline solution thereby the chitosan has no protonized amino groups and therefore it loses its haemostatic and antibacterial effect (Fouda, M. M. G. et al., Use of chitosan/polyamine biopolymers based cotton as a model system to prepare antimicrobial wound dressing. International Journal of Diabetes Mellitus. 2009, 1, 61-64).
We can conclude that wound covers based on staple microfibers from hyaluronic acid and/or hyaluronan, with the fibers long enough (more than 800 μm) to prepare tough nonwoven textile with a very low surface weight (below 5 g/m2), cotton wool, tampons, or material usable for spinning, have not been known so far. If a spinning nozzle and a draw-off (and curling) apparatus is arranged properly, it would be possible to process the forming staple microfibers into staple yarns.
We can also conclude that neither wound covers based on staple microfibers longer than 800 μm made from pure schizophylan, chitin, chitin/chitosan-glucane complex, internal mixture of chitin and chitosan, or water soluble chitosan salt, are known, even if we take into account the fact that chitin and also chitosan fibers exist and it is not possible to distinguish exactly between chitin and chitosan. Herein, the internal mixture is understood as the individual chitin and chitosan molecules are “entwined” mutually.
Said drawback is eliminated by the present invention.
The invention relates to the method of preparation of polysaccharide fibers, where the spinning solution of a polysaccharide of the concentration of 0.01 to 0.8% by weight is prepared, the polysaccharide having the molecular weight of 60 kDa to 3 MDa and being selected from the group comprising hyaluronic acid, a compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions, schizophylan, chitin/chitosan-glucan complex, a compound comprising chitin/chitosan-glucan complex and metal ions, internal mixture of chitin and chitosan, a compound comprising internal mixture of chitin and metal ions, sodium alginate, potassium alginate, ammonium alginate, xanthan, xanthan sodium salt, xanthan potassium salt, oxycellulose, oxycellulose sodium salt, oxycellulose potassium salt, carboxymethyl cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose sodium salt, and carboxymethyl cellulose potassium salt, or mixtures of polysaccharides, in an aqueous medium, which is spun in a non-stationary coagulation bath comprising pure C1-C3 alcohol. pH of the aqueous medium is preferably from 1 to 13. During the spinning, the content of water in the coagulation bath is within the range of 0.1 to 40% by weight, preferably 10% by weight. The spinning solution can pass through the air passage of the length of 1 to 200 mm before its entry into the coagulation bath. The spinning solution can also be stored for 5 to 24 hours in the refrigerator at the temperature of −40° C. to −10° C. before spinning. In a preferred embodiment, the spinning solution can comprise calcium or zinc salt in the concentration from 0.1 to 50% by weight selected for example from the group comprising acetates, formates, chlorides, sulphates, fluorides, nitrates, and hydrates of these salts.
The temperature of the coagulation bath is preferably within the range of 18 to 30° C.
In a preferred embodiment, the fibers are transferred from the coagulation bath to a stationary maturation bath for 20 minutes to 96 hours, wherein the stationary maturation bath comprises C1-C3 alcohol, and can comprise also up to 10% by weight of an organic acid.
In another preferred embodiment of the invention, the fibers are metalized for 20 minutes to 25 days in a metallization bath comprising C1-C3 alcohol or a mixture of C1-C3 alcohol and an organic acid, and a salt of a polyvalent metal selected from the group comprising calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt. The fibers can also be shortened, in a shortening bath comprising C1-C3 alcohol or a mixture of C1-C3 alcohol and an organic acid, from the starting length of 0.8 to 3 cm to a length suitable for a method of preparation of a nonwoven textile.
A fiber suspension can preferably be homogenized in a homogenization bath comprising C1-C3 alcohol or a mixture of C1-C3 alcohol and an organic acid.
The metallization of fibers can be run directly in the coagulation bath, the maturation bath, the shortening bath, or the homogenization bath by adding a salt of a polyvalent metal, or the fibers are transferred to a new metallization bath. The shortening of fibers can be run directly in the maturation bath or the fibers are transferred to a new shortening bath. The homogenization of fibers can be run directly in the shortening bath or the fibers are transferred to a new homogenization bath.
Then the fibers can be collected from the last bath and dried, wherein they can first be washed with alcohol before drying.
Further, the invention relates to the method of production of a cover based on polysaccharide fibers, where the fibers are prepared by the method disclosed above, or the mixture of fibers is prepared by the method disclosed above, or the mixture is prepared of fibers prepared by the method disclosed above and the fibers selected from the group comprising the fibers based on natural mycelium processed by a method maintaining the fiber character of natural mycelium, then the fibers are removed from the solution by filtration and the filtration cake is dried. The filtration cake can be compressed and/or washed with alcohol before drying. For example, in case of hyaluronan, only the “abundant water” is removed by alcohol, whereas the water bound in hyaluronan ensuring the bonds between the —COOH and —NHCOCH3 groups is kept, so the hyaluronan is not denatured in an undesirable way. The fibers can be also filtered off onto a suitable pad, the filtration cake and the pad are compressed and then dried, and the pad can be optionally removed from the dried filtration cake.
H-bonds are established between the individual fibers by the “wet” compression of the filtration cake, so the nonwoven textile (a cover) is compact, tough and elastic. The same interactions are established also with the fibers from the more hydrophilic pad, for example polyamide.
After compression, the wet cover of the wound comprises above all the used alcohol, but due to a high hydrophility of, for example, hyaluronic acid, it comprises also a certain amount of water bound in this polymer. Due to this reason it is necessary to define also the relative humidity of the air as the drying medium. The drying can be run at the temperatures of 20° C. to 80° C., and at the relative humidity of air of 15% to 80%, preferably by hot air.
In a preferred embodiment the dried filtration cake is then inserted into a metallization bath, then the fibers are collected from the metallization bath, washed, and dried.
Further the invention relates to a wound cover comprising the above mentioned biopolymer staple fibers, the fibers being prepared by the method described above, or the mixture of fibers prepared by the method described above and the fibers selected from the group comprising the fibers based on the natural mycelium processed by a method maintaining the fiber character of natural mycelium, i.e. the material from the natural mycelium has the character of a fiber with the diameter of 1 to 100 μm and the length at least of 0.1 mm. Biopolymer staple microfibers of internal and/or external wounds cover have a diameter of 1 to 100 μm and the length at least of 0.8 cm, preferably the length within the range of 0.8 to 3 cm. The fibers from which the cover is prepared can be non-shortened, i.e. of the length of 0.8 to 3 cm, or shortened in a shortening bath comprising C1-C3 alcohol or a mixture of C1-C3 alcohol and an organic acid, to the length suitable for the method of preparation of a nonwoven textile, i.e. the length for example of 1 to 5 mm.
The wound cover is preferably in the form of nonwoven textile, nonwoven textile fastened on a pad, cotton wool, tampon, or paper stuff.
Further, the invention also relates to an apparatus for preparation of polysaccharide fibers, the apparatus comprising a cylindrical container for the coagulation bath, and a rotary disc with the vertical axis of rotation passing through the bottom of the cylindrical container in a distance from the vertical axis of the cylindrical container. The apparatus further comprises a spinning nozzle the outlet of which is arranged in the cylindrical container in a distance from its wall, the distance being 70 to 130% of the shortest distance of the rotary disc from the wall of the cylindrical container. The rotary disc diameter is preferably 10 to 30% of the diameter of the cylindrical container. In a preferred embodiment of the invention the angle spacing of the vertical axis of the rotary disc and the outlet of the spinning nozzle is above 80°, with respect to the vertical axis of the container. In another preferred embodiment of the invention the spinning nozzle can be bent on its end comprising the outlet.
The invention will be described in more detail in the following description.
Biopolymer, as disclosed herein, is preferably a polysaccharide with the size of macromolecules of 60 kDa to 3 MDa (determined by the conventional SEC-MALLS, Size-Exclusion Chromatography coupled to Multi-Angle Laser Light Scattering method, this method is disclosed in detail for example in the publication: Bezákovã, Z. et al., Effect of microwave irradiation on the molecular and structural properties of hyaluronan. Carbohydrate Polymers 2008, 73, (4), 640-646).
The term polysaccharide in this disclosure is preferably understood as:
1. Hyaluronic acid and/or at least one compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions.
The term “a compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions” comprises any compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal or metals ions, including salts and metal complex compounds. The character of the bond between hyaluronic acid and a metal depends on the metal, usually it is an ionic bond, a covalent bond (ion-covalent) or a coordinate covalent bond. The said term also comprises the compounds comprising ions of more than one metal. The metals are preferably selected from the group comprising lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt.
2. Schizophylan
3. Chitin/chitosan-glucane complex and/or at least one compound comprising chitin/chitosan-glucane complex and metal ions. The term “a compound comprising chitin/chitosan-glucane complex and metal ions” comprises any compound comprising chitin/chitosan-glucane complex and metal or metals ions, including salts and metal complex compounds. The character of the bond between chitin/chitosan-glucane complex and metal depends on the metal, usually it is an ionic bond, a covalent bond (ion-covalent) or a coordinate covalent bond. The said term also comprises the compounds comprising ions of more than one metal. The metals are preferably selected from the group comprising lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt.
4. Internal mixture of chitin and chitosan and/or at least one compound comprising the internal mixture of chitin and chitosan and metal ions. The term “a compound comprising the internal mixture of chitin and chitosan and metal ions” comprises any compound comprising the internal mixture of chitin and chitosan and metal or metals ions, including salts and metal complex compounds. The character of the bond between the internal mixture of chitin and chitosan depends on the metal, usually it is an ionic bond, a covalent bond (ion-covalent) or a coordinate covalent bond. The said term also comprises the compounds comprising ions of more than one metal. The metals are preferably selected from the group comprising lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt.
5. Sodium, potassium, or ammonium alginate.
6. Xanthan and/or its sodium or potassium salt.
7. Oxycellulose and/or its sodium or potassium salt.
8. Carboxymethyl cellulose and/or its sodium or potassium salt.
The term “pure C1-C3 alcohol” refers to C1-C3 alcohol of the concentration of 97.5 to 100%, which is the starting concentration at the beginning of the spinning.
The method of preparation of staple microfibers according to the present invention is based on the use of a non-stationary coagulation bath, and its principle consists in the preparation of a spinning solution (preferably water solution) comprising a biopolymer or a mixture of biopolymers, and said solution is then spun in a non-stationary coagulation (precipitation) bath comprising alcohol, preferably propane-2-ol. During the spinning the concentration of alcohol decreases due to adding of the spinning solution. Optimum conditions are achieved if the water content varies from 0 to 40% by weight, preferably 10% by weight.
Preferably the water content in the coagulation bath during the spinning is maximum 10% by weight.
The coagulation bath does not comprise an acid. We have found by our own study that when the coagulation bath does not comprise an acid, the fiber formation at the nozzle outlet slows down, so the microfibers of the length up to 3 cm are formed and, in addition, the fibers do not stick together.
The term “coagulation bath” refers to a bath where the microfibers are formed from a spinning solution. This bath can be also denoted as the “spinning bath” or “precipitation bath”.
In the case of water soluble biopolymers the following method is used: first a water solution of biopolymer with pH in the range of 1 to 13, or any mixture of biopolymers, where the concentration of biopolymer (or the sum of biopolymers) in this solution is 0.01 to 8% by weight, is prepared, and this solution is then spun by the nozzle into a non-stationary coagulation bath.
The water solubility of the biopolymers without —COOH group can be enhanced by adding urea in such a way that its concentration in the spinning solution is 2 to 15% by weight.
In another embodiment the spinning solution can be agitated for 10 minutes to 1 hour, until the formation of a homogenous solution suitable for spinning. Thereafter, this solution can be preferably stored for 5 to 24 hours in a refrigerator at the temperature of −40° C. to −10° C. Then the solution is taken out, let heat to the room temperature, and this solution is then spun through the nozzle into a non-stationary coagulation bath. The low temperature causes disruption of the net of inner and outer hydrogen bonds of biopolymer, so the individual molecules separate apart and “linearize”, so they spin better from the solution (this technique is described for example for cellulose in the articles: Ying Wang, Yulin Deng. The Kinetics of Cellulose Dissolution in Sodium Hydroxide Solution at Low Temperatures. Biotechnology and Bioengineering, 102, 5, 2009; Magali Egal, Tatiana Budtova, Patrick Navard. The dissolution of microcrystalline cellulose in sodium hydroxide-urea aqueous solutions. Cellulose, 15, 361, 2008).
A special issue is the preparation of a spinning solution of chitin-chitosan complex with its content of 0.01 to 8% by weight, where chitin is dissolved in the mixture of dichloroacetic acid and formic acid or acetic acid (1:1 by weight), chitosan is dissolved in formic acid or acetic acid, and both the solutions are combined at agitation. The formed homogenous solution is then spun through the nozzle into a non-stationary coagulation bath.
In this spinning method the forming microfiber is formed and drawn by the force of a stream of the coagulation bath. Fibre drawing is a process where the fiber is deformed (elongated) along the longitudinal axis of the fiber. The length of the fiber increases, its diameter decreases, and its sheerness increases until forming a microfiber. Due to the orientation of macromolecules and supramolecular forms, and due to the increasing of the crystalline fraction, the mechanical parameters of the fiber enhance: its strength increases and its elongation decreases. During the process of elongation, less stable crystalline modifications can also change into more stable modifications.
The spinning can be carried out also by the dry-wet method, where an air passage before the entry of the stream of the solution being spun into the coagulation (spinning) bath is 1 to 200 mm.
The inner diameter of the nozzle is, of course, larger than in the order of μm because it would not be possible to press the solutions, which are relatively viscous, through the nozzle (needle) so narrow. We have found by our own study that in the stream leaving the nozzle, a microfiber bundle is formed in the coagulation bath, these microfibers separate apart in the moving coagulation bath (of course, provided that the twisting thereof does not occur).
Afterwards, the microfibers can be removed (filtrated) from the coagulation bath and their strength can be enhanced in a maturation bath. The maturation bath can comprise, in addition to the alcohol, also an acid, which causes, for example in the case of hyaluronan, a change of COONa group into —COOH group and thus forms a system of hydrogen bonds and therefore causes the formation of a tight supramolecular structure. Especially if the fibrils are not tight enough, which can happen due to the absence of an acid in the coagulation bath, the formed microfibers are optionally immersed to the maturation bath for 20 minutes to 96 hours.
In this embodiment of the invention the maturation bath preferably has the composition selected from the group comprising a mixture consisting of 90 to 100% by weight of an alcohol, and up to 10% by weight of an organic acid, for example formic acid or acetic acid. The bath therefore comprises either an alcohol alone or it can also contain an acid, which helps to stabilize the fiber structure, and therefore the fiber is tighter.
It is advisable to collect the forming microfiber form the bath immediately to prevent its uncontrollable twisting. The collected fiber can be inserted to a maturation bath. In the maturation bath, the system of hydrogen bonds, having been broken by dissolving of a biopolymer, is reconstituted, or, in other words, a secondary and tertiary structure (supramolecular in general) of a biopolymer, bearing the necessary biological and mechanical characteristics, is restored. It can be concluded that in the coagulation bath the microfiber of suitable dimensions is prepared, and then in the maturation bath the right mechanical characteristics are “prepared”.
As the microfibers formed in the non-stationary coagulation bath are too long for many applications, they can be preferably “shortened” to the length of approximately 1 to 5 mm in an appropriate knife mixer with the use of the maturation bath as the medium. A new bath, the so-called shortening bath, can also be used. The composition of the shortening bath is the same as the coagulation bath or the maturation bath. The shortening is necessary for the following preparation of planar textiles, not for the preparation of cotton wool.
Then it is optionally possible to further homogenize the fibers formed in this way with the aid of a suitable high speed dispergator in the so-called homogenization bath, where the previous shortening bath is preferably used. A new bath, the so-called homogenization bath, can be also used. The composition of the homogenization bath is the same as the coagulation bath and/or maturation bath.
The prepared staple microfibers are then collected/filtrated either alone in a suitable filtration apparatus or they are filtrated (fastened) onto a pad, generally a textile, optionally washed with alcohol and dried, again alone or together with the pad. The microfibers layer can be optionally removed from the pad. If it is presumed to remove the pad, it is advisable to use a more hydrophobic pad, for example low molecular polyethylene, which does not form H-bonds with the given fibers.
In another embodiment the microfibers are filtrated onto a pad, optionally washed, and fastened to this pad by wet compression with the use of a suitable apparatus, and dried (together with the pad).
The drying temperature of prepared staple microfibers is 20 to 80° C.
In another embodiment the microfibers of various chemical composition obtained by the previous procedures are mixed together in any ratio in the shortening bath or preferably in the homogenization bath, and they are homogenized in the homogenization bath. The following procedure is then the same as for the previous processes.
In this invention, the alcohol is methanol, ethanol, propane-1-ol, propane-2-ol, or any mixture thereof. The acid is formic acid, acetic acid, propionic acid, or any mixture thereof.
In another embodiment the microfibers obtained by the previous processes can be placed into the so-called metallization bath for 20 minutes to 25 days, where various metals are inserted into the microfibers; in this invention it concerns metal ions of calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt. From the technological point of view the metallization can be carried out in every bath (coagulation, maturation, shortening, homogenization; in the case of zinc also in the spinning solution) by adding a salt of polyvalent metal into a proper bath, or a separate metallization bath can be prepared, where this technological step (metallization) can be added to any step, right from the metallization immediately after the coagulation. The metallization is most commonly carried out in the maturation bath. If the metallization step is present, it is necessary to wash the final fibers with alcohol, for example with methanol or isopropanol.
In the case of biopolymers having the sequestration properties (hyaluronic acid/hyaluronan, internal mixture of chitin and chitosan, chitin/chitosan-glucane complex), the invention is characterized in that the metallization bath is
a) a solution of the salt of polyvalent metal of the concentration of 5·10−5 to 1·10−2 M in the mixture of 1 to 99% by weight of acid, 1 to 99% by weight of alcohol and up to 10% by weight of water, or
b) a solution of the salt of polyvalent metal of the concentration of 5·10−5 to 1·10−2 M in the alcohol comprising up to 10% by weight of water, optionally in the presence of a base selected from the group comprising LiOH, NaOH, KOH, Li2CO3, Na2CO3, K2CO3, LiHCO3, NaHCO3 a KHCO3, with the concentration of the base of 5·10−5 to 1 N.
As the salts of the polyvalent metal (Mn2+, Ca2+, Cr3+, Fe2+, Co3+, Cu2+, Zn2+), their acetates, formates, chlorides, sulphates, fluorides, nitrates, and hydrates are meant.
The prepared microfibers are usable as a free cotton wool, further for the production of nonwoven textiles of various types and by various techniques, and, after carding, they can be also used for the production of staple yarn. Nonwoven textiles, cotton wool, tampons, paper stuff, etc. can be made from the fibers.
The produced nonwoven textile can be “self-supporting” or in the form of a layer of microfibers on a suitable carrier/pad (e.g. textile, preferably fabric or knitted fabric) for the use for suitable wound covers.
The fastening of microfibers on a suitable textile is a substitution of lyophilization, which is technologically very complicated and expensive.
The method of spinning according to the present invention in the non-stationary coagulation bath and the following treatments in the consecutive baths exhibits certain advantages. The first advantage is that due to the staple microfiber, which is long enough, it is possible to prepare a nonwoven textile with a very low areal weight (˜5 g/m2) and at the same time tight enough for the common manipulation with the nonwoven textile of this areal weight. The nonwoven textile of the areal weight from 10 g/m2 can be advantageously used as self-supporting, i.e. without any pad, for example as a cover of internal wounds.
A further benefit is that during the spinning, at a low concentration of a polymer, e.g. 0.5 to 1% by weight of the aqueous polymer solution, it is possible to prepare the spinning solution only in water and spin it e.g. into propane-2-ol. Due to the fact that NaOH is not added into the spinning solution, the medium is not alkaline, thus the polymer does not degrade. In addition, the complicated removal of organic acids (formic, acetic) and alcohol (methanol, ethanol) from the fiber prepared by the conventional method (PV 2010-1001) is avoided.
During the spinning of e.g. internal mixture of chitin and chitosan we avoid using the coagulation bath comprising substantial amounts of inorganic salts (10% of NaOH and 30% of sodium acetate). Furthermore, a substantial advantage of this method is that during the spinning in the coagulation bath comprising generally an alcohol (for example propane-2-ol), the ammonium groups (chitosan-NH3+X−, X−═Cl−, CH3COO−, etc.) are not converted to amine groups and therefore the microfibers keep their haemostatic and antibacterial effect.
A certain amount of solvent used during the production process remains in the final microfibers/fibers. This amount can be defined with the aid of NMR spectroscopy within the range of 0.2 to 5% by weight.
The subject of the invention further comprises covers of internal and external wounds based on the microfibers prepared by the method of the invention. The covers of internal and external wounds can be in the form of woven or nonwoven textiles or cotton wool. The covers of internal and external wounds are for example dressings, bandages, patches, tampons.
The subject of the invention therefore comprises the covers of internal and external wounds based on staple microfibers consisting of hyaluronic acid and/or at least one compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions, where the fiber can optionally comprise metal salts originating from the production process, which can be prepared by the method according to the present invention, which has the properties of a textile fiber, i.e. nonwoven textiles, cotton wool, tampons, paper stuff, and the like can be made from this fiber. The fiber is composed of hyaluronic acid and/or at least one compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions, where the molecular weight of macromolecules is within the range of 100 kDa to 3 MDa. Preferably the diameter of microfiber (primary fiber) is 1-100 μm and the length 0.8-3 cm.
The term “a compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal ions” includes any compound comprising hyaluronic acid and metal or metals ions including salts and metal complex compound. The character of the bond between hyaluronic acid depends on the metal, usually it is an ionic bond, covalent (ionic covalent) or coordinate covalent bond. The said term also comprises the compounds comprising the ions of more than one metal. The metals are preferably selected from the group comprising lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt.
Preferably, the maximum content of these cations in a fiber is as follows:
The fiber can optionally comprise a metal salt originating from the production process and it refers to acetates, formates, sulphates, chlorides, fluorides, nitrates, phosphates, hydroxides, or oxides of the metals selected from the group comprising lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, copper, manganese, zinc, chromium, iron, and cobalt. These salts can form a weak or strong interaction with hyaluronic acid. In the case of zinc, the fiber can also comprise the zinc salts Zn2+ as the metal salts. The wound covers based on staple microfibers of hyaluronic acid/hyaluronan serve for the construction of bandages absorbing the liquid from the wound and at the same time they stimulate the process of granulation. In the combination with a suitable antiseptic agent they can be utilized for both the acute and chronic non-healing wounds.
Further, the subject of the invention comprises the covers of internal and external wounds based on staple microfibers consisting of chitin/chitosan-glucan complex, wherein the fiber can optionally comprise metal salts originating from the production process, which can be prepared by the procedure according to the present invention, and has the properties of a textile fiber, i.e. both the woven and nonwoven textiles, cotton wool, tampons, paper stuff, and the like can me made from this fiber. The microfiber/fiber is composed of chitin/chitosan-glucane complex, where the molecular weight of macromolecules is within the range of 70 kDa to 1 MDa. Wound covers based on the staple microfibers of chitin/chitosan-glucane complex serve to cover acute seriously contused and bleeding wounds before their final treatment. They can be of use also in the case of wounds which tend to form necrotic crusts.
Further, the subject of the invention comprises the covers of internal and external wounds based on staple microfibers consisting of schizophylane, wherein the fiber can optionally comprise metal salts originating from the production process, which can be prepared by the procedure according to the present invention, and has the properties of a textile fiber, i.e. both the woven and nonwoven textiles, cotton wool, tampons, paper stuff, and the like can be made from this fiber. The microfiber/fiber is composed of schizophylane, where the molecular weight of macromolecules is within the range of 200 kDa to 2 MDa. These wound covers can be utilized in combined bandages (wound covers) at the patients who need improvement of local immune processes (e.g. the patients treated with corticosteroids or other immuno suppressants).
We have found by our own study that amino groups play the key role in spinning of chitin or chitosan. In our opinion, the type of supramolecular structure (helix, double or triple helix, fibers, gels, etc.) depends on the presence of amino groups in the macromolecule. The amino group, due to its sp3 hybridization, forms 3D structures via the hydrogen bonds. Therefore, it has 3D cross-linking character and thus, these molecules preferentially form gels in water, which are, however, not easy to spin properly. On the contrary, the acylated amino groups, due their H-bonds, form 2D structures, so they support the formation of linear chains (for example double-helixes) suitable for spinning. As it was stated above, the chitin amino groups are mainly acetylated whereas the chitosan amino groups are deacetylated (in other words, there are predominantly the amino groups). The problem consists in that chitin can be spun, but it has not the required biological properties. On the contrary, chitosan has proper biological properties, but it is not possible to prepare fibers from it, or they are of low quality (fragile). The solution is provided by the present invention, where chitin with suitable spinning properties is used on purpose. Further the chitosan with suitable biological properties is used. The principle consists in dissolving both the polymers, mixing the solutions (in other words, two types of macromolecules are mixed to form chitin-chitosan complex) so that the weight ratio of chitin/chitosan is within the range of 3/4-7/1, and the obtained homogenous solution is spun in the coagulation bath.
The subject of the invention further comprises covers of internal and external wounds from staple fibers consisting of an internal mixture of chitin and chitosan (i.e. chitin-chitosan complex) that can be prepared by the method according to the present invention, the fibers having the properties of a textile fiber, which means that nonwoven textiles, cotton wool, tampons, paper stuff, and the like can be made from this staple microfiber. The staple microfiber is composed of chitin, where the molecular weight of the macromolecules is within the range of 100 kDa to 1 MDa, and chitosan, where the molecular weight of the macromolecules is within the range of 60 kDa to 1 MDa. These wound covers will be used for the construction of haemostatic and antibacterial bandages.
a shows the wound cover prepared according to the Example 14—self-supporting, possible to be applied without any supporting knitted fabric.
b shows the character of a fiber structure (wound cover) prepared from the staple microfibers of hyaluronic acid and native microfibers of chitin/chitosan-glucan complex in the ratio of 1:1 according to the Example 14.
a shows the wound cover prepared according to the Example 16 (self-supporting layer).
b shows the wound cover according to the Example 16. The layer character under the electron microscope. Magnification of 1000×.
The pictures of the fibers were made with the microscope Tescan VEGA II LSU (Tescan, Brno). This microscope utilizes wolfram cathode and the maximum resolution is 3 nm. The parameters of measurement were as follows: accelerating voltage of the primary electron beam: 5 kV, working distance—WD: 4-5 mm, pressure in the chamber: high vacuum, display mode: secondary electrons.
The fibers were stuck on a carbon sticking target and then powdered with gold. The gold layer on the sample: approx. 15 nm, powdering machine: SC7620 Mini Sputter Coater (Quorum Technologies, UK).
The molecular weight of hyaluronic acid, or hyaluronans, was measured with the aid of HPLC from Shimadzu, equipped with the light scattering detector miniDAWN from Watt Technologies (the so-called SEC-MALLS method).
The apparent viscosity was measured with ARG2 rheometer from TA Instruments. The cone (40 mm/1°)-plate system of measurement was used. Cone data: first—diameter, second—bevel angle. The metals were determined with the aid of sequential optical emission spectrometer with the ionization in the inductively coupled plasma (Integra XL2, GBC Australia) with the use of ceramic V-groove nebulizer and cyclonic cloud chamber (both from Glass Expansion, Australia).
In the air atmosphere, at intense stirring, 6 grams of sodium hyaluronan with molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 94 g of water with adding of 0.51 g NaOH to obtain a homogenous, well flowing, viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol, stirred with an agitator, more specifically with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the “moving (non-stationary) bath” and transferred to the “maturation bath” consisting of propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes, the microfiber was removed from the maturation bath and dried at the temperature of 60° C. The fiber character is shown in
In the air atmosphere, at intense stirring, 6 grams of sodium hyaluronan with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 94 g of water with adding of 0.51 g NaOH to obtain a homogenous, well flowing, viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol, stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the “moving bath” and transferred to the “maturation bath” consisting of propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. Then the shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake was compressed to the form of a “paper” sheet, and the produced product was dried at the room temperature (approx. 25° C.). The paper sheet, or nonwoven textile, is shown in
This textile is suitable for flat absorption bandages which stimulate the granulation and wound healing. In the combination with an antiseptic agent they can be used for the construction of functional bandages and patches. They can also be useful in the field of plastic and correction surgery.
In the air atmosphere, at intense stirring, 6 grams of sodium hyaluronan with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 94 g of water with adding of 0.51 g NaOH to obtain a homogenous, well flowing, viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol, stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the “moving bath” and transferred to the “maturation bath” consisting of propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. Then the shortened fiber was filtrated off and the filtration cake was dried without compression at 20° C. A voluminous layer of microfibers—a cotton wool showed in FIG. 5—was thereby obtained as a base of a nonwoven textile suitable for various uses. The cotton wool is suitable for the direct application into deep wounds and caverns or defects after the teeth extraction. It will also be of use in surgery for improving the healing of various connections and anastomoses. For this purpose, the combination of fibers and an appropriate antiseptic agent is possible.
In the air atmosphere, at intense stirring, 6 grams of sodium hyaluronan with the molecular weight of 19.37 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 94 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing, viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol, stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to methanol where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the fiber was dried at the temperature of 60° C. and its character is shown in
The use of this fiber is the same as in the Example 1.
In the air atmosphere, at intense stirring, 6 grams of sodium hyaluronan with the molecular weight of 19.37 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 94 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing, viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol, stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to methanol where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. Then the shortened fiber was filtrated off, compressed on a calendar (with medium pressure) and dried at the room temperature (approx. 25° C.). The character of the layer is shown in
A voluminous layer of microfibers, suitable for the production of nonwoven textile, is thereby obtained.
This textile is suitable for flat absorption bandages which stimulate the granulation and wound healing. In the combination with an antiseptic agent it can be used for the construction of functional bandages and patches. They will be of use especially for healing of extensive defects. It concerns especially the broken surgical wounds and polytraumas.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 3 g of chitosan from Aldrich company (catalog no. 448869—declared as: Chitosan, low molecular weight, 75-85% deacetylated) were dissolved in 72 g of 2% acetic acid (water solution) to obtain a 4% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. In this solution, 3 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o.) with the molecular weight of 19.37 kDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved. The obtained solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.6 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2200 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to methanol where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. Then the shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake was dried at 20° C. without compression.
This bandage is suitable for acute bleeding wounds. It will be of use especially in traumatology.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 1 g of xanthane (Xanthan Gum—Donau Chem-Typ: 890.235, 402 80 MESH, Ceroga Pharm) was dissolved in 99 g of water to obtain a 1% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. Then the shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake of xanthane fibers was dried at 20° C. without compression. The xanthane fibers can adjust the adhesiveness and hydration character of combined bandages.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of xanthane (Xanthan Gum—Donau Chem-Typ: 890.235, 402 80 MESH, Ceroga Pharm) and 0.5 g of hyaluronic acid (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}; 1.7 MDa, determined by the SEC-MALLS method) were dissolved in 99 g of water to obtain a 1% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. The shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake of mixed fibers (xanthane-hyaluronic acid) was dried at 20° C. without compression.
The xanthane fibers in the combination with hyaluronan can modify the flow of interstitial fluid and thereby regulate the adhesiveness and hydration character of combined bandages.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 3 g of ammonium alginate (Protamin S—fy. FMC BioPolymer, N-3002 Drammen, Norway) was dissolved in 97 g of water to obtain a 3% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. The shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake of the fiber of ammonium alginate was dried at 20° C. without compression.
The alginate staple fibers can be used for example for entrapping the fluid in the area of a dry wound.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 1 g of ammonium alginate and 1 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}; 1.7 MDa, determined by the SEC-MALLS method) were dissolved in 98 g of water to obtain a 2% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-01 and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened. The shortened fiber was filtrated off and the obtained filtration cake of the mixed fiber of alginate—hyaluronic acid was dried at 20° C. without compression.
These mixed fibers ensure various hydration and granulation characteristics of the wounds with impaired vascularity.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.25 g of schizophylane (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}; 1.7 MDa, determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was being dissolved in 25 g of water for 24 hours to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. A layer of this fiber was prepared by the filtration on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2). The obtained filtration cake was compressed (together with the pad) in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. As the layer obtained in this way has no affinity to the pad, it gets unstuck spontaneously during the drying. The areal weight of the obtained fibers (nonwoven textile) from schizophylane was approx. 15 g/m2. The formed microfiber layer can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately.
The fibers obtained thereby are of use in combined bandages for the patients who are in need of improvement of local immune processes (e.g. the patients treated with corticosteroids or other immunosuppressants).
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.25 g of schizophylane (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) and 0.25 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) were being dissolved in 50 g of water for 24 hours to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. The suspension of the mixed fiber was filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixed fiber was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed (including the pad) in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. As the obtained mixed fibers have an affinity to the pad, the layer was not removed from the pad, and the layer of the mixed fibers from schizophylane and hyaluronic acid had the areal weight of approx. 10 g/m2 (weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of microfibers (
The combination of schizophylane+HA in mixed fibers is of use for the construction of combined immunomodulating bandages.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle with the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. 0.5 g of homogenized fibrous sample of chitin/chitosan-glucane complex (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}, species: Aspergillus niger. dry mass: 93.64%, ash: 0.82%, GLA content: 13.26%) was added to the shortened fiber. The suspension of the mixture of fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. The obtained layer of the mixture of fibers from chitosan-glucane complex and hyaluronic acid had the areal weight of approx. 15 g/m2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of microfibers (
These fibers are suitable for covering acute seriously contused and bleeding wounds before their final treatment. They can also be of use in the case of wounds which tend to form necrotic crusts.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. 0.5 g of homogenized fibrous sample of chitin/chitosan-glucane complex (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}, obtained from Schizophyllan commune) was added to the shortened fiber. The suspension of the mixture of fibers was further homogenized and then filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in the two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. and relative air humidity of 15%. The obtained layer of the mixture of fibers from chitosan-glucane complex and hyaluronic acid had areal weight of approx. 15 g/m2 (weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately (
These fibers are suitable for covering acute seriously contused and bleeding wounds before their final treatment. They can also be of use in the case of wounds which tend to form necrotic crusts.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. 0.5 g of microfibers from chitin/chitosan-glucane complex (the preparation is described in Example 18) was added to the shortened fiber. The suspension of the mixture of fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in the two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. The obtained layer of the mixture of fibers from chitosan and hyaluronic acid had areal weight of approx. 15 g/m2 (weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately. These fibers are suitable for covering acute seriously contused and bleeding wounds before their final treatment. They can also be of use in the case of wounds which tend to form necrotic crusts.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. The suspension of the fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 52° C. and relative air humidity of 18%. The obtained layer of fibers from hyaluronic acid had areal weight of approx. 15 g/m2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad (
The character of the layer of microfibers under the electron microscope is shown in
These fibers are suitable for flat absorption bandages which stimulate the granulation and wound healing. In the combination with an antiseptic agent they can be used for the construction of functional bandages and patches. They can be useful also in the field of plastic and correction surgery.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 1 g of chitosan from Aldrich company (catalog no. 448869—declared as: Chitosan, low molecular weight, 75-85% deacetylated) was dissolved in 100 g of 2% acetic acid (2 g of ice-cold acetic acid and 98 g of water) to obtain a 1% homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. To this suspension of fibers, the suspension of fibers from hyaluronic acid prepared according to the Example 22 was further added. The suspension of both types of fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. The obtained layer of fibers from hyaluronic acid and chitosan fibers had areal weight of 15 g/m2. The formed layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately. The formed layer of microfibers is water-insoluble.
This textile is suitable for the construction of patches for treating smaller wounds and bruises.
In a mixture of acetic acid and formic acid (97 g, mixture 1:1 by weight), 3 g of chitin (University of Pardubice, approx. 1 MDa—determined by viscosimetry), acetylation degree of amine groups approx. 95%, extracted from crab shells provided by VCI Brasil company) were dissolved at stirring, and the solution was stirred for 2 hours at 22° C. (room temperature).
In another reaction container, 4 g of chitosan (University of Pardubice, approx. 100 kDa—determined by viscosimetry), acetylation degree of amine groups approx. 84%) were dissolved, at stirring, in 96 g of formic acid, and the solution was stirred for 2 hours at 22° C. (room temperature). Then both solutions were combined and the resulting solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to the maturation bath comprising propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 120 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. In the end, the suspension of fibers was filtrated off and thereby the layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was washed with methanol and dried at 20° C.
The bandages based on these fibers are of use for covering smaller acute bleeding wound which tend to dry prematurely.
The procedure was the same as in Example 16. Only the obtained suspension of fibers was diluted 3 times with 2-propanol and the suspension was filtered.
The obtained layer of fibers form hyaluronic acid had the areal weight of 5 g/m2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The obtained layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately.
This textile is suitable for flat absorption bandages which stimulate the granulation and wound healing. Combined with an antiseptic agent they can be used for the construction of functional bandages and patches. They can be of use mainly in the treatment of extensive defects. It concerns especially broken surgery wounds and polytraumas.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 1.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) were dissolved in 200 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. 0.257 g of CaCl2.6H2O in 10 ml of water (sample no. 1) or 0.43 g of CaCl2.6H2O in 10 ml of water (sample no. 2) were added to the solution. After thorough mixing, this homogenous solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.6 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. The suspension of the fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of fibers of calcium salt of hyaluronic acid was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. The obtained layer of fibers from calcium salt of hyaluronic acid had areal weight of 15 g/m2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The formed layer of micro fibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately.
The content of the calcium ion in microfibers was determined by the method of optical emission spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma. The results are shown in the following table:
This textile is suitable as the contact (with the wound) layer for the construction of haemostatic bandages.
In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (Contipro Biotech s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and then they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. The suspension of the fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 20° C. The obtained layer of fibers from hyaluronic acid had areal weight of 15 g/m2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The obtained layer of microfibers was inserted without the pad into 100 ml of metallization bath comprising: 65 ml of methanol p.a., 35 ml of formic acid 98% pure, and 1 ml of water, and 2 g of CrF2 (sample no. 1); or 2 g of KCr(SO4)2.12H2O (sample no. 2); or 2 g of CuSO4.5H2O (sample no. 3); or 2 g of ZnSO4.7H2O (sample no. 4); or 2 g of CaCl2.2 H2O (sample no. 5). The layer of microfibers was left in the metallization bath for 25 days, then it was removed, washed with methanol, and dried at room temperature.
The content of the respective cations was determined by the method of optical emission spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma.
The content of the respective metals is shown in the following table.
The samples nos. 1 and 2 (metallization with chromium ions) were water-insoluble.
The microfibers comprising the metal ions in a farmacologically acceptable concentration are of use in many topical applications. For example the microfibers, or the textile products made of them, comprising calcium ions, can be suitable for the construction of haemostatic bandages. The microfibers, or the textile products made of them, comprising zinc ions or a combination of zinc ions with copper ions, can be utilized as a part of the bandages intended to application on the wounds difficult to heal, as are for example decubitus or venous ulcers. The textile products from the microfibers comprising zinc, copper or chromium ions, or their combination, can be used as a part of covers applied on various forms of pemphigus. The textile products comprising the microfibers bearing zinc ions, or a combination of zinc and copper ions, can be utilized in the combination with various dermatics in preparations suppressing the symptoms of dermatitides. The microfibers comprising zinc or copper ions or their mixtures can be a component of cosmetic masks.
The preparation of the layer from spun HA with the aerial weight of 15 g·m−2 on a suitable carrier In the air atmosphere at intense stirring, 0.5 g of sodium hyaluronan (CPN s.r.o. Dolní Dobrou{hacek over (c)}) with the molecular weight of 1.7 MDa (determined by the SEC-MALLS method) was dissolved in 50 g of water to obtain a homogenous, well flowing viscous solution suitable for spinning. This solution was spun by the wet method with a nozzle having the diameter of 0.4 mm into the spinning bath comprising propane-2-ol and stirred with the Heidolph DIAX 900 dispergator at 2500 rpm. The forming microfiber was collected from the bath and transferred to propane-2-ol, where the coagulation of the fiber was completed. After 60 minutes the maturation bath containing the microfibers was poured into the Eta-Ergo knife mixer, where the fibers were shortened, and further they were shortened and homogenized with the aid of Heidolph DIAX 900 mixer. The suspension of the fibers was further homogenized and in the end filtrated on a suitable pad (knitted fabric from polyamide 6 (silk) with areal weight of approx. 40 g·m−2) and thereby a layer of this mixture of fibers was prepared. The obtained filtration cake was wet compressed in a two-roll calendar and dried at 25° C. and relative air humidity of 65%. The obtained layer of fibers from hyaluronic acid had the areal weight of 15 g·m−2 (the weight of the pad was subtracted). The obtained layer of microfibers can be applied including the pad or it can be removed—separated—from the pad and the layer of microfibers can be used separately. The character of the layer is shown in
The fibers are suitable for flat absorption bandages which stimulate the granulation and wound healing. Combined with an antiseptic agent they can be used for the construction of functional bandages and patches. They can also be useful in the field of plastic and correction surgery.
The disclosed examples can be preferably carried out on the apparatus according to the invention, which is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PV 2012 - 306 | May 2012 | CZ | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CZ2013/000063 | 5/10/2013 | WO | 00 |