| Literature DB >> 24222862 |
Hassan Sadozai1, Dorsa Saeidi.
Abstract
Recent advances in nanomedicine have been studied in the veterinary field and have found a wide variety of applications. The past decade has witnessed a massive surge of research interest in liposomes for delivery of therapeutic substances in animals. Liposomes are nanosized phospholipid vesicles that can serve as delivery platforms for a wide range of substances. Liposomes are easily formulated, highly modifiable, and easily administered delivery platforms. They are biodegradable and nontoxic and have long in vivo circulation time. This review focuses on recent and ongoing research that may have relevance for veterinary medicine. By examining the recent developments in liposome-based therapeutics in animal cancers, vaccines, and analgesia, this review depicts the current significance and future directions of liposome-based delivery in veterinary medicine.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24222862 PMCID: PMC3809611 DOI: 10.1155/2013/167521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Vet Sci ISSN: 2090-4452
Figure 1A graphical depiction of the versatility of liposomes as delivery platforms. (*PEG: poly-ethylene glycol).
An overview of the morphological characteristics of different types of liposomes [5].
| Multilamellar vesicles | Consist of several concentric bilayers. Range in size from 500 to 5000 nm. Ideal for trapping hydrophobic drugs in additional lamellae |
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| Large unilamellar vesicles | Consist of one concentric lipid bilayer surrounding a large inner aqueous environment. Range in size from 200 to 800 nm. Ideal for trapping large amounts of hydrophilic drugs |
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| Small unilamellar vesicles | Consist of one concentric bilayer. Small size in the range of 100 nm. Ideal for long-term circulation. |
Figure 2Thermosensitive liposomes are potent sustained delivery vehicles that can be triggered to release contents when desired.
An overview of some of the liposome-based therapeutic systems studied in recent years with clinical significance for veterinary medicine. (For explanation of symbols, please refer to legend).
| Species | Agent | Disease/condition | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dogs | Doxorubicin (thermosensitive liposomes) | Spontaneous canine tumours | [ |
| Cats | Doxorubicin in conjunction with radiotherapy | Soft-tissue sarcoma | [ |
| Dogs | HSA cell lysates | Canine hemangiosarcoma (HSA) | [ |
| Dogs | Endostatin DNA | Soft-tissue sarcoma | [ |
| Chickens |
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| [ |
| Chickens | Inactivated APEC (avian pathogenic | Avian colibacillosis vaccine | [ |
| Chickens | Newcastle disease virus | Newcastle disease vaccine | [ |
| Sheep | MIC3 protein from |
| [ |
| Green-cheeked conures | Butorphanol tartrate | Experimentally induced arthritic pain | [ |
| Dogs | Hydromorphone | Postoperative pain | [ |
| Horses | Diclofenac | Osteoarthritis pain | [ |
■Clinical trial. ▲Pilot study or primary evaluation in listed species.