Research
Latest published research we're tracking.
The newest skincare and haircare papers from PubMed, linked to the ingredients we decode. Summaries are the authors' own abstracts — we excerpt, attribute, and link out to the source.
Showing research linked to Gelatin (view profile)
Clear3 papers under Hyaluronic acid
Injectable VEGF-loaded gelatin-hyaluronic acid hydrogel to synergistically promote flap survival via rapid angiogenesis.
Journal of materials chemistry. B · 2026
Random-pattern skin flaps are commonly used in plastic surgery to close skin defects, but necrosis often occurs in the distal portions of flaps due to insufficient blood supply, which severely limits their clinical utility. Thus, we developed a vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-loaded injectable hydrogel to promote local angiogenesis to improve skin flap survival. The hydrogel, composed of… Read on PubMed →
Functional hyaluronic acid/gelatin hydrogel accelerates the closure and healing of diabetic wounds.
Carbohydrate polymers · 2026
The healing of extensive drug-resistant and skin area diabetic wounds poses significantly greater challenges compared to the recovery of typical wounds. Advanced approaches like tissue engineering and regenerative medicine hold promise, exemplified by hyaluronic acid/gelatin/poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAm) hydrogel, a temperature-sensitive auto-shrinkage hydrogel with injectable biomimetic… Read on PubMed →
A review of biomacromolecular hydrogels inspired by regenerative organisms: Translating biological insights into tissue integration and regeneration.
International journal of biological macromolecules · 2026
Regenerative biology offers powerful insights into scarless healing and functional tissue integration, yet translating these biological principles into clinically effective biomaterials remains a major challenge. Biological macromolecule-based hydrogels, derived from natural proteins and polysaccharides, have emerged as promising platforms to bridge this gap due to their intrinsic bioactivity… Read on PubMed →