From the printer to the lungs: Inkjet-printed aerogel particles for pulmonary delivery
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Elsevier
Abstract
Inkjet printing is as an emerging technique in the biomedical field offering cost-effective
solutions for flexible production and the engineering of personalized medicine solutions.
Thermal inkjet printing technology in the “drop-on-demand” mode allows the design of fully
automated deposition patterns with high spatial resolution for applications ranging from
microparticles in drug formulations to cell deposition in regenerative medicine. In particular,
novel formulations in the form of porous particles are sought for the treatment of respiratory
disorders and the systemic administration of bioactive compounds using the pulmonary route.
Aerogel particles, i.e. highly porous and light-weight nanoporous powders, are particularly
promising as carriers for the pulmonary route. In this work, the preparation of aerogel
microspheres by thermal inkjet printing followed by supercritical drying is presented for the
first time to overcome the current processing limitations. Alginate aerogel particles were loaded
with salbutamol sulphate, a bronchodilator used for the treatment of asthma attacks and chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, as a model drug for sustained pulmonary delivery. The
optimized processing method allowed the preparation of reproducible nanostructured microparticles with modified salbutamol sulphate release profile and aerodynamic performance of relevance for oral inhalation purposes
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C. López-Iglesias, A.M. Casielles, A. Altay, R. Bettini, C. Alvarez-Lorenzo, C.A. García-González, From the printer to the lungs: Inkjet-printed aerogel particles for pulmonary delivery, Chemical Engineering Journal (2018), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2018.09.159
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2018.09.159Sponsors
This work was supported by Xunta de Galicia [grant numbers ED431F 2016/010, ED431C 2016/008] ; C.A. García-González acknowledges to MINECO for a Ramón y Cajal Fellowship [RYC2014-15239]. The authors would like to thank O’Toner Consumibles S.A. and the Technical Services Department of the USC for their valuable technical support with the selection and modifications of the inkjet cartridges and printer, respectively. Authors are also grateful to Dr. E. Solla (CACTI, Universidade de Vigo) for the technical support with the FIBSEM images.
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional








