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Decellularized Small Intestine for Full Thickness Burn Wound Treatment

Silva, I. V.; Rodrigues, I.; Sousa, C.; Costa, R.; Moroni, L.; Oliveira, A.

2026-02-11 bioengineering
10.64898/2026.02.10.704815 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Treating extensive full-thickness burn wounds remains difficult in clinical practice because available donor skin is often limited, the risk of infection is high, and many standard dressings do not perform well when defects are large or structurally complex. These limitations have shifted attention to decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) scaffolds, which can provide physical coverage while preserving biochemical cues that may support tissue repair. Based on this rationale, we designed a decellularization method that improves reagent penetration to produce a full-thickness porcine decellularized small intestine (dSI) scaffold for use in burn wound coverage. The protocol removed most cellular material while leaving low levels of detergent residue, and it maintained the native three-layer structure of the intestinal wall. Most key ECM components, such as collagen and glycosaminoglycans, were also retained. In this study, the dSI showed several properties relevant to burn care, capacity to absorb large amounts of fluid, water vapor transmission rates similar to those reported for skin, and resisted microbial penetration in vitro. From a mechanical standpoint, the scaffold retained anisotropic behaviour and remained stable under cyclic loading. This pattern indicates that it could withstand repeated deformation instead of acting like a fragile membrane. Degradation tests under enzymatic and oxidative conditions indicate that the material breaks down in a controlled way over a period that appears consistent with typical wound-healing timelines. In vitro assays indicated that the scaffold was cytocompatible, as human dermal fibroblasts and keratinocytes both attached to its surface and continued to proliferate. Cell responses differed depending on surface orientation, suggesting that preserved intestinal layers may shape cell behaviour in ways that are often missing in thinner or more uniform matrices. Overall, full-thickness dSI appears to act as a biologically active scaffold and shows mechanical properties that exceed those of many currently used burn dressings.

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