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Hollow Particles Obtained by Prilling and Supercritical Drying as a Potential Conformable Dressing for Chronic Wounds.

Maria Rosaria SellittoChiara AmanteRita Patrizia AquinoPaola RussoRosalía Rodríguez-DoradoMonica NeaguCarlos A García-GonzálezRenata AdamiPasquale Del Gaudio
Published in: Gels (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The production of aerogels for different applications has been widely known, but the use of polysaccharide-based aerogels for pharmaceutical applications, specifically as drug carriers for wound healing, is being recently explored. The main focus of this work is the production and characterization of drug-loaded aerogel capsules through prilling in tandem with supercritical extraction. In particular, drug-loaded particles were produced by a recently developed inverse gelation method through prilling in a coaxial configuration. Particles were loaded with ketoprofen lysinate, which was used as a model drug. The core-shell particles manufactured by prilling were subjected to a supercritical drying process with CO 2 that led to capsules formed by a wide hollow cavity and a tunable thin aerogel layer (40 μm) made of alginate, which presented good textural properties in terms of porosity (89.9% and 95.3%) and a surface area up to 417.0 m 2 /g. Such properties allowed the hollow aerogel particles to absorb a high amount of wound fluid moving very quickly (less than 30 s) into a conformable hydrogel in the wound cavity, prolonging drug release (till 72 h) due to the in situ formed hydrogel that acted as a barrier to drug diffusion.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • drug delivery
  • drug release
  • drug induced
  • cancer therapy
  • adverse drug
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • emergency department
  • metal organic framework
  • tissue engineering