2 research outputs found
Monoolein Cubic Phase Gels and Cubosomes Doped with Magnetic Nanoparticles–Hybrid Materials for Controlled Drug Release
Hybrid materials
consisting of a monoolein lipidic cubic phase
(LCP) incorporating two types of magnetic nanoparticles (NP) were
designed as addressable drug delivery systems. The materials, prepared
in the form of a gel, were subsequently used as a macroscopic layer
modifying an electrode and, after dispersion to nanoscale, as magnetocubosomes.
These two LCPs were characterized by small-angle X-ray scattering
(SAXS), cross-polarized microscopy, magnetic measurements, and phase
diagrams. The magnetic dopants were hydrophobic NP<sub>oleic</sub> and hydrophilic NP<sub>citric</sub>, characterized by dynamic light
scattering (DLS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and their
influence on the properties of the cubic phases was investigated.
The removal of the anticancer drug, Doxorubicin (Dox) from the hybrid
cubic phase gels was studied by electrochemical methods. The advantages
of incorporating magnetic nanoparticles into the self-assembled lipid
liquid crystalline phases include the ability to address the cubic
phase nanoparticle containing large amounts of drug and to control
the kinetics of the drug release