Abstract

Myocardial infarction (MI) constitutes the first cause of morbidity and mortality in our life, so using highly conductive and elastic materials to produce an engineered cardiac patch is an effective way to improve the myocardium infarction area function. Here, shape memory polymers of the polyurethane/polyaniline/silicon oxide (PU/PANI/SiO2) electrospinning sub-micron fiber patch were precisely produced in the case of the hydrogen bonding effect and interaction between the carboxyl groups to provide compatibility, phase mixing/miscibility, and stability. The sub-micron fiber patch prepared by our group has some remarkable characteristics, such as sub-micron fibers, 3D porous structure, special thickness to simulate the extracellular matrix (ECM), elastic deformation, good properties in conducting weak electrical signals, stability to maintain the whole structure, and self-adhesion. This sub-micron fiber material has been proven to be effective, easy, and reliable. Through precise design of the material system, structure regulation, and performance optimization, the aim is to produce a sub-micron fiber cardiac patch to simulate the myocardium ECM and improve conductive signal transduction for potential MI therapy.

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