Borneo Journal of Pharmacy
Vol. 9 No. 2 (2026): Borneo Journal of Pharmacy

Integration of Chitosan and Ageratum conyzoides Extract in Hydrogel Patches for Enhanced Wound Closure Kinetics under the TIME Framework

Malinda Prihantini (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Yance Anas (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Junvidya Heroweti (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Dewi Andini Kunti Mulangsri (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Wahyudin Bin Jamaludin (Universitas Borneo Lestari)
Luthfia Mufaridhotun Nahla (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Reyhan Raka Mahadika (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Fazdilatul Hawa (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Nayla Azkya (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)
Rifka Sephia Fassadila (Universitas Wahid Hasyim)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Jun 2026

Abstract

Chronic wounds pose a significant healthcare challenge in Southeast Asia, with prevalence rates reaching 50.8%. Conventional systemic therapies often fail due to persistent inflammation and bacterial biofilm formation. This study presents a novel approach that combines chitosan, a hydrophilic scaffold that maintains optimal moisture and prevents microbial contamination, with Ageratum conyzoides, which is rich in flavonoids with anti-inflammatory and pro-proliferative properties. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of chitosan combined with A. conyzoides in a hydrogel patch formulation on wound healing as a comprehensive approach to the TIME (Tissue, Inflammation, Moisture, Epithelization) concept. The standardized plant material was formulated into patches by a solvent‐casting method using three extract‐to‐chitosan ratios: F1 (2:0), F2 (1:1), and F3 (2:1). Evaluation encompassed physical characterization, acute dermal irritation, and wound‐healing activity assessment. Plant material met the Indonesian Herbal Pharmacopeia standards, yielding 9.96 ± 0.10% total flavonoid content, with phytochemical screening confirming flavonoids, phenolics, and quinones. All formulations demonstrated favorable physical characteristics: thickness of 0.08–0.11 mm, folding endurance of 64–479 folds, and moisture absorption of 6.12–9.39%, with no acute dermal irritation observed in rabbits. In a 14-day linear incision wound model using male Wistar rats, F3 achieved superior healing efficacy (97% closure, rate constant 0.2972 day⁻¹), reaching 90% closure by day 7.75, significantly outperforming the positive control (Bioplacenton®, 89%) and negative control (79%). These results highlight F3's synergistic effects via anti-inflammatory and proliferative mechanisms, following first-order kinetics and comprehensively addressing the TIME framework to enhance wound healing.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

bjop

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology

Description

Borneo Journal of Pharmacy publishes various scientific articles covering Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in the field but not limited to: Pharmacology-Toxicology, including pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, pharmacotherapy, and toxicology. Pharmacognosy-Phytochemistry, including ...