DocumentCode :
2084331
Title :
NMR investigation of the same charged gelling biosystems for drug capsulation
Author :
Khripov, A.A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Medicine, St. Petersburg State Univ., Russia
fYear :
2005
fDate :
21-24 June 2005
Firstpage :
283
Lastpage :
286
Abstract :
It is proposed a series of new NMR relaxometry, diffusometry, spectroscopy techniques for the development of drug capsulation technology. On the basis of this NMR study a new capsulation system, the same charged gelling biosystem, was proposed. The nanostructure properties of the gelling bio-system including the phase diagram, nanopore and aggregate radii, drug release rate, system stability were measured using a new diffusion-specific probe, the same charged surfactant micelles, and theoretical approach of diffusion problem with complex variable representation. Drug release rate from the bio-capsule was determined using new NMR localization method without the application of the magnetic field gradients. The stability of the capsulating nanobiosystems was controlled by NMR relaxometry of water protons and parallely by the DSC and CD methods. The results show high sensitivity of the NMR methods to study homogeneous hydrogels with low volume fraction, an agreement with the X-ray diffraction data and promising perspectives for the use of the same charged gelling biosystems as high drug capacity, rate-controlled, bioadhesive media in pharmacology.
Keywords :
biodiffusion; biomedical NMR; biomedical materials; drug delivery systems; gels; nanotechnology; tumours; CD method; DSC method; NMR relaxometry; X-ray diffraction data; bioadhesive media; biocapsule; charged gelling biosystem; diffusion-specific probe; drug capsulation technology; drug release rate; homogeneous hydrogels; localization method; nanopore; nanostructure property; pharmacology; phase diagram; sensitivity; spectroscopy technique; surfactant micelles; system stability; tumour treatment; water proton; Aggregates; Current measurement; Drugs; Magnetic field measurement; Nanoporous materials; Nuclear magnetic resonance; Pharmaceutical technology; Phase measurement; Spectroscopy; Stability;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Electromagnetic Compatibility and Electromagnetic Ecology, 2005. IEEE 6th International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9374-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMCECO.2005.1513125
Filename :
1513125
Link To Document :
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