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Balloon Inspired Conductive Hydrogel Strain Sensor for Reducing Radiation Damage in Peritumoral Organs During Brachytherapy
101
Citations
49
References
2022
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringSmart PolymerHydrogel SizeBiomaterials DesignBiomedical EngineeringCancer EngineeringHydrogelsSelf-healing MaterialBiomechanicsBrachytherapyBiomedical DevicesMatrix BiologyRadiation OncologyRadiation DamageBiopolymer GelBiomedical SensorsRadiation DoseMedicineBiomaterialsPeritumoral OrgansBiocompatible Material
Abstract Conductive hydrogels have recently gained impressive attention in biological medicine and intelligent electronics. Despite the multifunctions demonstrated by existing conductive hydrogels, it is still a challenge to introduce a hydrogel to adjust the distance between the peritumoral organs and the tumor, reducing the radiation damage to the peritumoral organs. Here, a hydrophobic associating hydrogel with multiple desirable features is fabricated based on diverse supramolecular assembly. The introduction of MXene and hydrolyzed keratin (HK) imparts the hydrogel with excellent conductivity, ultra‐stretchability (>2000%), and good self‐adhesion. Moreover, the hydrogel is utilized as an intelligent sensor intended for monitoring various human movements and physiological signals, demonstrating a wide strain window, the rapid response time (130 ms), and outstanding strain sensitivity (GF = 10.22). Inspired by balloon inflation, the hydrogel is designed to separate the tumor from the peritumoral organs in brachytherapy. It plays a role in reducing the radiation dose and damage to the peritumoral organs. The authors also simulate the attenuation process of the radiation signal according to the change of the hydrogel size and develop a smartphone application (app) to monitor the safety range of the different radiation risks, manifesting its great potential in soft intelligent sensors.
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