Background:
Increasing new emerging ill-healths have posed therapeutic challenges in modern medicine. Hence polyurethane hydrogels that comprise polyol, copolymer and extender could be prepared from diverse chemical compounds with adjuvants such as ascorbic acid, sorbitol among others. Their mechano-physicochemical properties are functions of their biological activities. Therefore there is need to assess their therapeutic potentials.
Methods:
literature were searched on synthesis and medical uses of polyurethane – hydrogels, polyurethane – aerogels and polyurethane – graphene nanocomposite materials, with a view to identifying their sources, synthesis, mechanical and physiochemical properties, biomedical applications, chirality, and the relevance of Lipinski's rule of five in the synthesis of oral polyurethane nanocomposite materials.
Results:
The prepared hydrogels and aerogels could be used as polymer carriers for intradermal, cutaneous and intranasal drugs. They can be fabricated and used as prosthetics. In addition the strength modulus (tensile stress-tensile strain ratio), biodegradability, biocompatibility and non-toxic effects of the polyurethane hydrogels and aerogels are the highly desirable properties. However, body and environmental temperatures may contribute to their instability, hence there is need to improve on the synthesis of aerogels and hydrogels of polyurethane that can last for many years. Alcoholism, diabetes, pyrogenic diseases, mechanical and physical forces, and physiological variability may also reduce the life span of polyurethane aerogels and hydrogels.
Conclusion:
Synthesis of polyurethane hydrogel-aerogel complex that can be used in complex, rare biomedical cases is of paramount importance. These hydrogels and aerogels may be hydrophobic, hydrophilic, aerophobic-aerophilic or amphiphilic and sometimes lipophilic depending on structural components and the intended biomedical uses. Polyurethane graphene nanocomposite materials are used in the treatment of a myriad of diseases including cancer and bacterial infection.