Metal-based regenerative strategies for peripheral nerve injuries: From biodegradable ion source to stable conductive implants

Authors
Kim, HyewonRahaman, Khandoker AsiqurKwon, JieunCho, SeohyeonChung, SeokHan, Hyung-SeopKim, Yu-Chan
Issue Date
2025-06
Publisher
The Korean Society for Biomaterials | BioMed Central
Citation
Biomaterials Research
Abstract
Peripheral nerve injury is a common health issue in modern aging societies, with the onlytreatment available being autograft transplantation. Unfortunately, autograft is oftenlimited due to donor availability and immune rejection. Additionally, the peripheralnervous system has limited regenerative capacity, making the treatment of peripheralnerve injuries challenging. Metal-based regenerative medicine and tissue engineeringstrategies provide advanced solutions to the problem. Metal-based biomaterials such asconduits, filaments, alloys, hydrogels, and ceramics can deliver biofunctional metal ionsand significantly ameliorate axonal growth and functional recovery. In parallel, metal-based electromagnetic stimulation demonstrates potential for nerve regeneration andinflammation regulation. The potential of metal-based biomaterials in promotingperipheral nerve regeneration highlights the need for further research in tissue engineeringand regenerative medicine. However, rapid degradation, long-term biocompatibility, andnecessary optimization regarding injury types remain to be explored. This reviewsummarizes the reported metal-based biomaterials utilized in peripheral nerveregeneration research. The aim is to showcase advanced technologies available in thefield, which may potentially become a viable alternative to autografts, offeringtransformative applications in the regenerative medical field.
ISSN
1226-4601
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/152716
DOI
10.34133/bmr.0219
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > Others
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE