Study for Evaluation of Hydrogels after the Incorporation of Liposomes Embedded with Caffeic Acid.
Ioana Lavinia DejeuLaura Gratiela Gratiela VicasLavinia Lia VlaiaTunde JurcaMariana Eugenia MureșanAnnamária PallagGeorgeta Hermina ConeacIoana Viorica OlariuAna Maria MuțAnca Salomea BodeaGeorge Emanuiel DejeuOctavian Adrian MaghiarEleonora MarianPublished in: Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Caffeic acid (CA), a phenolic acid, is a powerful antioxidant with proven effectiveness. CA instability gives it limited use, so encapsulation in polymeric nanomaterials has been used to solve the problem but also to obtain topical hydrogel formulas. Two different formulas of caffeic acid liposomes were incorporated into three different formulas of carbopol-based hydrogels. A Franz diffusion cell system was used to evaluate the release of CA from hydrogels. For the viscoelastic measurements of the hydrogels, the equilibrium flow test was used. The dynamic tests were examined at rest by three oscillating tests: the amplitude test, the frequency test and the flow and recovery test. These carbopol gels have a high elasticity at flow stress even at very low polymer concentrations. In the analysis of the texture, the increase of the polymer concentration from 0.5% to 1% determined a linear increase of the values of the textural parameters for hydrogels. The textural properties of 1% carbopol-based hydrogels were slightly affected by the addition of liposomal vesicle dispersion and the firmness and shear work increased with increasing carbomer concentration.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- drug release
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- wound healing
- extracellular matrix
- cancer therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- oxidative stress
- magnetic resonance
- single cell
- stem cells
- protein kinase
- molecular dynamics
- anti inflammatory
- stress induced
- high resolution
- functional connectivity