Construction of Nano-Assembled Microcapsules Embedded with Gold Nanoparticles for use in Novel Drug Delivery Systems
Abraham Samuel Finny

TL;DR
This paper presents the development of nano-assembled microcapsules embedded with gold nanoparticles, aiming to improve controlled drug delivery systems, especially for use in ultrasound-based medical applications, addressing limitations of current stents.
Contribution
It introduces a novel nanobiotechnological method to synthesize and assemble microcapsules with embedded gold nanoparticles for enhanced drug delivery capabilities.
Findings
Microcapsules can be engineered for ultrasound-based drug delivery.
The microcapsules facilitate sustained and controlled drug release.
Potential for reducing in-stent restenosis and related complications.
Abstract
Coronary stents have changed the way in which coronary artery diseases are managed. Although bare-metal stents can be traced back to 1994, long term efficacy of these stents has been shattered by ISR (In-Stent restenosis) and late stent thrombosis. Research on finding a solution to these issues has led to the development of DESs (Drug eluting stents). However long term effectiveness of DESs and various drug delivery systems have raised concerns. Also current DESs does not have the capability to adjust the drug dose or release kinetics that corresponds to the diseased status of the affected vessel. Through the use of a drug delivery system which employs controlled drug release, it may be possible to control the release rate of the pharmacological drugs or substances of interest, and therefore one might be able to circumvent the range of events that leads to ISR, thus preventing the need…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoronary Interventions and Diagnostics · Nanoparticle-Based Drug Delivery · Electrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
