Fibrin gels and their clinical and bioengineering applications
University of Pennsylvania · Philadelphia University
Abstract
Fibrin gels, prepared from fibrinogen and thrombin, the key proteins involved in blood clotting, were among the first biomaterials used to prevent bleeding and promote wound healing. The unique polymerization mechanism of fibrin, which allows control of gelation times and network architecture by variation in reaction conditions, allows formation of a wide array of soft substrates under physiological conditions. Fibrin gels have been extensively studied rheologically in part because their nonlinear elasticity, characterized by soft compliance at small strains and impressive stiffening to resist larger deformations, appears essential for their function as haemostatic plugs and as matrices for cell migration and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 99
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Fibrin
- Thrombin
- Fibrinogen
- Wound healing
- Blood clotting
- Biomedical engineering
- Polymerization
- Elasticity (physics)