1 / 22

Drug Delivery Systems

container. +. body. drug. Drug Delivery Systems. Definition: drug delivery systems. Biomaterials used to release drugs in the body, in a controlled manner. Control of timing and target. http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/9711b34b.jpg. Conventional Drug Delivery Systems:

webb
Télécharger la présentation

Drug Delivery Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. container + body drug Drug Delivery Systems

  2. Definition: drug delivery systems Biomaterials used to release drugs in the body, in a controlled manner. Control of timing and target. http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/9711b34b.jpg

  3. Conventional Drug Delivery Systems: • tablets, capsules, pills, suppositories, creams, ointments, liquids, aerosols, and injectables From Chien, Novel Drug Delivery Systems. pg 2.

  4. Polymeric DDSs • Polymeric matrix incorporates drug • Known release rate over prolonged duration • Release to target (site of action) • Goal: constant release • Target concentration in tissue depends on tissue absorption, drug kinetics, etc • Drug protection when in situ (particularly for longer release periods)

  5. DDS types • Monolithic devices: matrix systems • Reservoir devices: rate controlling membranes • Degradable systems: polymers degrade due to chemical action

  6. DDS types, again From Shi, Biomedical Devices and their Applications, 2004

  7. Diffusion in monolithic and reservoir devices http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/003.html

  8. What happens after delivery? http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/003.html

  9. Use Fick’s law to design drug release

  10. Rate control

  11. “smart materials”, mechanism of action http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/003.html

  12. Biodegradable systems Figure 7. Drug delivery from (a) bulk-eroding and (b) surface-eroding biodegradable systems http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/003.html

  13. Biodegradable PLA and PEG PLA = poly(lactic) acid

  14. PLGA (poly lactic-co-glycolic acid) and polyorthoester Biodegradable microparticles of 60:40 lactide:glycolide PLGA. (Photo courtesy of T. Tice, Southern Research Institute, Birmingham, AL.) Biodegradable microparticle of 75:25 lactide:glycolide PLGA after 133 days of degradation in water. Biodegradable polyorthoester rods after (left) 9 and (right) 16 weeks of implantation in rabbits. (Photos courtesy of H. Heller, Advanced Polymer Systems, Redwood City, CA.)

  15. Elementary osmotic pump Pressure-controlled release. Pressure increases due to osmosis. http://www.uweb.engr.washington.edu/research/tutorials/drugdelivery.html

  16. Extra salt layer: two compartment pump

  17. Alza – Duros pump http://www.alza.com/alza/duros

  18. Two-compartment osmotic (commercial) pump

  19. Diabetes From Chien, Novel Drug Delivery Systems. Figure 30, pg 35.

  20. Ocusert, pilocarpine to glaucoma patients From Chien, Novel Drug Delivery Systems. Figure 1, pg 260.

  21. Transdermal delivery (patches) Cleary GW, "Transdermal Delivery Systems: A Medical Rationale," in Topical Drug Bioavailability, Bioequivalence, and Penetration, Shah VP, and Maibach HI (eds), New York, Plenum, pp 17–68, 1993.

  22. “Smart materials” designed based on external cues http://www.devicelink.com/mpb/archive/97/11/003.html

More Related