1 research outputs found
Bijels as a Fluid Labyrinth for Drugs: The Effect of Nanoparticles on the Release Kinetics of Ethosuximide and Dimethyl Fumarate
Bijels (bicontinuous
interfacially jammed emulsion gels)
raised
an increasing interest as biomaterials for controlled drug delivery
due to their biphasic nature organized in mesoscopic tortuous domains.
Two bijel formulations were prepared and explored as delivery systems
for both hydrophilic and lipophilic drugs, ethosuximide and dimethyl
fumarate. The two bijel-like structures, based on polymerized ε-caprolactone/water,
differ in the stabilizing nanoparticle hydroxyapatite (inorganic)
and nanogel-based nanoparticles (organic). Diffusion nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy has been used to characterize the bijel structure
and the transport behavior of the drug molecules confined within the
water/organic interconnected domains. A reduced diffusion coefficient
is observed for several concentrations of the drugs and both bijel
formulations. Moreover, in vitro release profiles
also reveal the effect of the microstructure and drug–nanoparticle
interactions