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Controlled Drug Delivery

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Controlled Drug Delivery. Spatial and temporal control over drug ... Jean-Christophe Leroux. Gauri Misra. Anish Dhanarajan. Jon Urban. Yuandong Gu. NSF, NIH ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Controlled Drug Delivery


1
Controlled Drug Delivery
Spatial and temporal control over drug
concentration
2
Usual Gold Standard in Controlled Release
  • Zero Order Release

Toxic Level
Drug Concentration in Plasma
Minimum effective concentration
Time
3
  • Zero order delivery ineffective when
  • Minimum effective concentration changes with time
  • Insulin (required level depends on glycemia)
  • Addictive drugs, e.g. heroin, cocaine, etc.
  • Down regulation of hormone receptors
  • Other drugs (e.g. nitroglycerin)

4
NONTRADITIONAL DRUG DELIVERY
5
Gonadotropin Hormone Releasing Hormone (GnRH)
  • Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism
  • Failure of episodic GnRH secretion
  • Males Failure to reach puberty
  • Females Failure to sustain reproductive cycle
  • Treatment Rhythmic, pulsatile delivery of GnRH

6
VALUE OF RHYTHMIC DELIVERY
7
OTHER HORMONES
8
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9
DEVICE DESIGN
10
SIMPLE(ST) TOY MODEL
Glucose Permeability
(Area A)
(G)
(rapid step)
(h)
(Volume V)

ASSUMPTIONS Instantaneous conversion of glucose
to H Instantaneous phase transition of
membrane Constant permability to H
11
TOY MODEL BEHAVIOR
Time (t)
hss,L
hLH
h
hss,H
hHL
CONDITION FOR OSCILLATION
Pulse Width
Interpulse Interval
12
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13
Prototype Device
Glucose pH7.4
14
pH Oscillations with Corresponding r-GnRH Flux
into Donor Cell
15
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16
Effect of Changing MAA Doping
17
What is a hydrogel?
Hydrogels are 3-D crosslinked hydrophilic polymer
networks.
18
Discrete Hydrogel Volume Phase Transition (DVPT)
  • Discrete
  • First-order phase transition
  • Volume
  • Swells or collapses
  • Polyelectrolytes
  • Ionizable groups
  • Induced by changes in temperature, pH, organic
    solvents, light, and salt
  • ??

19
Hydrogel Volume Phase Transition
20
Swelling ForcesElasticity of Matrix
  • Entropic
  • unperturbed state is most likely
  • Modulus
  • due to cross-link density

Modified from T. Tanaka, Sci. Am., 1981, Vol. 244
21
Swelling ForcesPolymer-solvent Mixing
  • Polymer-solvent mixing entropy
  • mixed state more probable
  • Polymer-solvent interaction
  • Polymer prefers polymer
  • Solvent prefers solvent
  • Chi parameter quantifies preferences

Modified from T. Tanaka, Sci. Am., 1981, Vol. 244
22
Swelling Forces--Ionic
  • Ion-solvent mixing
  • Mixed state more probable
  • Ideal, dilute solution
  • Donnan Partitioning
  • Negative charge on membrane
  • Positive ions drawn in to neutralize membrane

P. Flory, Principles of Polymer Chemistry, 1965
23
Hydrogen Ion Dissociation, Charge Density on
Hydrogel
24
Matrix Stress vs. Swelling Ratio
  • Ionization ? environmental sensitivity
  • Bistability

Collapsed equilibrium
Curve shifts with pH
Swollen equilibrium
25
More Advanced Toy Model
Swelling of Hydrogel
H Concentration in Hydrogel
Glucose Transport/H Production
Dissociation
Electroneutrality
26
SWELLING HYSTERESIS
27
HOPF BIFURCATIONSPREDICTED OSCILLATIONS
b
a
28
Acknowledgments
  • John P. Baker
  • Jean-Christophe Leroux
  • Gauri Misra
  • Anish Dhanarajan
  • Jon Urban
  • Yuandong Gu
  • NSF, NIH
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