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Yongping Liang

Researcher at Xi'an Jiaotong University

Publications -  44
Citations -  7616

Yongping Liang is an academic researcher from Xi'an Jiaotong University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Self-healing hydrogels & Wound healing. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 41 publications receiving 2973 citations. Previous affiliations of Yongping Liang include Lanzhou University.

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Antibacterial adhesive injectable hydrogels with rapid self-healing, extensibility and compressibility as wound dressing for joints skin wound healing.

TL;DR: In vivo experiments indicated that curcumin loaded hydrogels significantly accelerated wound healing rate with higher granulation tissue thickness and collagen disposition and upregulated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in a full-thickness skin defect model.
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Adhesive Hemostatic Conducting Injectable Composite Hydrogels with Sustained Drug Release and Photothermal Antibacterial Activity to Promote Full-Thickness Skin Regeneration During Wound Healing

TL;DR: These adhesive hemostatic antioxidant conductive photothermal antibacterial hydrogels based on hyaluronic acid-graft-dopamine and reduced graphene oxide using a H2 O2 /HPR (horseradish peroxidase) system are prepared for wound dressing and are an excellent wound dressing for full-thickness skin repair.
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Injectable antibacterial conductive nanocomposite cryogels with rapid shape recovery for noncompressible hemorrhage and wound healing.

TL;DR: The authors report on the development of injectable, biocompatible carbon nanotube reinforced quaternized chitosan cryogels with shape memory, conductivity and antibacterial properties for hemostatic control for lethal noncompressible hemorrhage hemostasis and wound healing.
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Functional Hydrogels as Wound Dressing to Enhance Wound Healing.

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive review of the functional hydrogel as a wound dressing is presented, which summarizes the skin wound healing process and relates evaluation parameters and then reviews the advanced functions of hydrogels such as antimicrobial property, adhesion and hemostasis, anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidation, substance delivery, self-healing, stimulus response, conductivity, and the recently emerged wound monitoring feature.
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Degradable conductive injectable hydrogels as novel antibacterial, anti-oxidant wound dressings for wound healing

TL;DR: In vivo experiments indicated that hydrogel with AT addition (OHA-AT/CEC hydrogels) significantly accelerated wound healing rate with higher granulation tissue thickness, collagen disposition and more angiogenesis in a full-thickness skin defect model.