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In Vitro Characterization of Drug-Loaded Superabsorbent Polymer Microspheres: Absorption and Release Capacity of Contrast Material, Antibiotics and Analgesics.

Authors :
Narita, Akiko
Nakano, Yuta
Okada, Hiroaki
Yamamoto, Takahiro
Matsunaga, Nozomu
Ikeda, Shuji
Izumi, Yuichiro
Kitagawa, Akira
Ota, Toyohiro
Suzuki, Kojiro
Source :
CardioVascular & Interventional Radiology; Nov2023, Vol. 46 Issue 11, p1632-1640, 9p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the characteristics of drug-loaded superabsorbent polymer microspheres (SAP-MS) such as drug absorption, drug release, diameter, and visibility. Materials and Methods: SAP-MS (HepaSphere150–200 µm; Merit Medical, South Jordan, UT, USA) were suspended in drug solutions: (a) cefazolin, (b) lidocaine, (c) iopamidol and cefazolin, (d) iopamidol and lidocaine, and (e) iopamidol, cefazolin, and lidocaine. The concentrations of drugs were measured, and the amount of each drug absorbed was calculated. Filtered drug-loaded SAP-MS were mixed with saline, and the drug release rates were calculated. The diameter changes of SAP-MS during absorption were observed. Radiography of drug-loaded SAP-MS was evaluated as radiopacity by contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Results: The drug concentration did not change during absorption. The release rates increased for 10 min and then came to an equilibrium. The mean amounts of drug absorbed at 180 min and mean release rates at 24 h were (a) cefazolin: 265.4 mg, 64.2%; (b) lidocaine: 19.6 mg, 75.6%; (c) iopamidol: 830.2 mg, 22.5%; cefazolin: 137.6 mg, 21.2%; (d) iopamidol: 1620.6 mg, 78.5%; lidocaine: 13.5 mg, 81.4%; and (e) iopamidol: 643.7 mg, 52.9%; cefazolin: 194.0 mg, 51.6%; lidocaine: 5.3 mg, 58.4%. The diameter of SAP-MS increased for approximately 15 min. Finally, the diameters of SAP-MS were (a) 3.9 times, (b) 5.0 times, (c) 2.2 times, (d) 5.5 times, and (e) 3.6 times larger than the original size. Drug-loaded SAP-MS containing iopamidol were visible under X-ray imaging, with CNRs of (c) 3.0, (d) 9.0, and (e) 4.5. Conclusion: SAP-MS can absorb and release iopamidol, cefazolin, and lidocaine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01741551
Volume :
46
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
CardioVascular & Interventional Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173341825
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00270-023-03559-y