DocumentCode
1119639
Title
Feasibility of an Electrode-Reservoir Device for Transdermal Drug Delivery by Noninvasive Skin Electroporation
Author
Pliquett, Uwe ; Weaver, James C.
Author_Institution
Inst. fur Bioprozess-und Analysenmesstechnik e.V, Heilbad Heiligenstadt
Volume
54
Issue
3
fYear
2007
fDate
3/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
536
Lastpage
538
Abstract
Electrical creation of aqueous pathways across the skin´s outer layer [stratum corneum (SC)] provides an approach to transdermal delivery of medium-size water-soluble compounds. However, nerve stimulation should be avoided. Here, we show that a microstructured electrode array can significantly confine the electric field to the nerve-free SC. The prototype electrode-reservoir device (ERD) contains field-confining electrodes and a fluorescent drug surrogate [sulphorhodamine (SR)]. In vivo human experiments at the forearm with approximately rectangular voltage pulses up to 500 V and 1-ms duration cause electroporation as measured by skin resistance change but only rarely caused sensation. Human skin in vitro experiments with such pulses up to 300 V transported SR across the SC. Our results are supported by a model´s prediction of the field in the ERD and nearby tissue
Keywords
bioelectric potentials; biomedical electrodes; drug delivery systems; microelectrodes; skin; electrode-reservoir device; fluorescent drug surrogate; microstructured electrode; noninvasive skin electroporation; skin resistance; transdermal drug delivery; Drug delivery; Electrodes; Fluorescence; Humans; In vivo; Prototypes; Pulse measurements; Skin; Strontium; Voltage; Electrode; electroporation; field confinement; sensation; stratum corneum; transdermal drug delivery; Administration, Cutaneous; Drug Delivery Systems; Electrochemotherapy; Electrodes; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Feasibility Studies; Flow Injection Analysis; Humans; Microfluidics; Skin Absorption;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2006.886828
Filename
4100844
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