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Abbas Shafiee

Queensland Health

ORCID: 0000-0002-8885-9025

Publishes on Synthesis and biological activity, Synthesis and Biological Evaluation, Synthesis and Characterization of Heterocyclic Compounds. 869 papers and 22.2k citations.

869Publications
22.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Wound Healing: From Passive to Smart Dressings
Mojtaba Farahani, Abbas Shafiee|Advanced Healthcare Materials|2021
Cited by 738

The universal increase in the number of patients with nonhealing skin wounds imposes a huge social and economic burden on the patients and healthcare systems. Although, the application of traditional wound dressings contributes to an effective wound healing outcome, yet, the complexity of the healing process remains a major health challenge. Recent advances in materials and fabrication technologies have led to the fabrication of dressings that provide proper conditions for effective wound healing. The 3D-printed wound dressings, biomolecule-loaded dressings, as well as smart and flexible bandages are among the recent alternatives that have been developed to accelerate wound healing. Additionally, the new generation of wound dressings contains a variety of microelectronic sensors for real-time monitoring of the wound environment and is able to apply required actions to support the healing progress. Moreover, advances in manufacturing flexible microelectronic sensors enable the development of the next generation of wound dressing substrates, known as electronic skin, for real-time monitoring of the whole physiochemical markers in the wound environment in a single platform. The current study reviews the importance of smart wound dressings as an emerging strategy for wound care management and highlights different types of smart dressings for promoting the wound healing process.

Controlling Cell Behavior through the Design of Biomaterial Surfaces: A Focus on Surface Modification Techniques
Hamed Amani, Hamidreza Arzaghi, Mehrdad Bayandori et al.|Advanced Materials Interfaces|2019
Cited by 420Open Access

Abstract Surface interaction at the biomaterial–cell interface is essential for a variety of cellular functions, such as adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation. Nevertheless, changes in the biointerface enable to trigger specific cell signaling and result in different cellular responses. In order to manufacture biomaterials with higher functionality, biomaterials containing immobilized bioactive ligands have been widely introduced and employed for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine applications. Moreover, a number of physical and chemical strategies have been used to improve the functionality of biomaterials and specifically at the material interface. Here, the interactions between materials and cells at the interface levels are described. Then, the importance of surface properties in cell function is discussed and recent methods for surface modifications are systematically highlighted. Additionally, the impact of bulk material properties on the cellular responses is briefly reviewed.