| Literature DB >> 17123922 |
Concepcion Lecaroz1, Carlos Gamazo, María Jesus Renedo, María J Blanco-Prieto.
Abstract
Micro- and nanoparticles of poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) loading gentamicin were prepared by a solvent evaporation method with the aim of obtaining appropriate vectors for systemic administration. Microspheres presented mean diameters below 3 microm and nanoparticles showed homogeneous sizes with a diameter of 320 nm. Drug loading was more efficient in the case of microencapsulation. The more hydrophilic copolymers with carboxyl-end groups yielded higher microparticle loadings, reaching encapsulation efficiencies up to 9.2 microg mg(-1) of polymer (502H, 503H or 75:25H). Nanoparticles made of 502H PLGA also achieved an acceptable level of encapsulation (6.2 microg mg(-1)). Particles prepared by using the solvent evaporation method showed no aggregation after hydration, in contrast to the microparticles prepared by spray-drying which showed fast and high auto-aggregation. In vitro release profiles revealed that 503H microspheres showed the highest burst during the first hour, while the most sustained release was for microparticles of 502H copolymer (40% of gentamicin remained in the formulation after 28 days). In summary, microspheres made of 502H, 503H and 75:25H and nanoparticles of 502H showed the best potential properties for systemic use in the treatment of intra-cellular gentamicin-susceptible pathogens.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17123922 DOI: 10.1080/02652040600946886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microencapsul ISSN: 0265-2048 Impact factor: 3.142