Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Bioactuators based on stimulus-responsive hydrogels and their emerging biomedical applications

342

Citations

147

References

2019

Year

TLDR

Stimulus‑responsive hydrogels, which are biocompatible, highly hydrated, and mimic extracellular matrices, are increasingly used to fabricate soft bioactuators for real‑time biosensing, targeted drug delivery, artificial muscle, and cell microenvironment engineering. This review surveys hydrogel material selection and multiple stimulus‑responsive mechanisms for actuator fabrication, and discusses recent advances in biomedical applications. The authors detail how different stimuli (pH, temperature, light, electricity, magnetic fields) trigger hydrogel actuation and outline design strategies for integrating these mechanisms into bioactuators. The review concludes with current challenges and future prospects for hydrogel‑based bioactuators.

Abstract

Abstract The increasingly intimate bond connecting soft actuation devices and emerging biomedical applications is triggering the development of novel materials with superb biocompatibility and a sensitive actuation capability that can reliably function as bio-use-oriented actuators in a human-friendly manner. Stimulus-responsive hydrogels are biocompatible with human tissues/organs, have sufficient water content, are similar to extracellular matrices in structure and chemophysical properties, and are responsive to external environmental stimuli, and these materials have recently attracted massive research interest for fabricating bioactuators. The great potential of employing such hydrogels that respond to various stimuli (e.g., pH, temperature, light, electricity, and magnetic fields) for actuation purposes has been revealed by their performances in real-time biosensing systems, targeted drug delivery, artificial muscle reconstruction, and cell microenvironment engineering. In this review, the material selection of hydrogels with multiple stimulus-responsive mechanisms for actuator fabrication is first introduced, followed by a detailed introduction to and discussion of the most recent progress in emerging biomedical applications of hydrogel-based bioactuators. Final conclusions, existing challenges, and upcoming development prospects are noted in light of the status quo of bioactuators based on stimulus-responsive hydrogels.

References

YearCitations

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