Publication | Closed Access
Drug-loaded electrospun mats of poly(vinyl alcohol) fibres and their release characteristics of four model drugs
372
Citations
28
References
2006
Year
Tissue EngineeringModel DrugsPharmaceutical ScienceEngineeringBiomedical EngineeringVinyl AlcoholNanomedicineHigh-performance FiberDrug Delivery SystemPolymer ChemistryMaterials ScienceElectroactive MaterialDrug-loaded Electrospun MatsMicro-encapsulationPva NanofibresPharmacologyNanofiberPolymer ScienceDrug Delivery SystemsMolecular WeightMedicineDrug Analysis
Mats of PVA nanofibres were successfully prepared by the electrospinning process and were developed as carriers of drugs for a transdermal drug delivery system. Four types of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug with varying water solubility property, i.e. sodium salicylate (freely soluble in water), diclofenac sodium (sparingly soluble in water), naproxen (NAP), and indomethacin (IND) (both insoluble in water), were selected as model drugs. The morphological appearance of the drug-loaded electrospun PVA mats depended on the nature of the model drugs. The 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance results confirmed that the electrospinning process did not affect the chemical integrity of the drugs. Thermal properties of the drug-loaded electrospun PVA mats were analysed by differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis. The molecular weight of the model drugs played a major role on both the rate and the total amount of drugs released from the as-prepared drug-loaded electrospun PVA mats, with the rate and the total amount of the drugs released decreasing with increasing molecular weight of the drugs. Lastly, the drug-loaded electrospun PVA mats exhibited much better release characteristics of the model drugs than drug-loaded as-cast films.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1