Adv Drug Deliv Rev
September 2025
Drug delivery is a process to deliver the required amount of a drug to a target site within an appropriate timeframe, while minimizing possible side effects and maximizing efficiency. This is accomplished by drug delivery systems (DDSs), which are platforms composed of natural and/or synthetic materials that carry drugs or bioactive agents at a particular site or throughout a patient's body via oral, transdermal, topical, intravenous, or intramuscular routes to minimize the drug's toxicity and provide desired therapeutic effects without affecting the patient's healthy cells, tissues or organs. Despite significant advancements, drug delivery still faces numerous scientific, technological, and clinical challenges, such as poor drug bioavailability, unstable loading efficiency, lack of site-specificity, undesired prolonged delivery of drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) and endoscopic mucosal resection (ESR) are used to eliminate tiny, flat lesions in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). A substantial submucosal cushion is required for effective dissection. Commonly used saline and hypertonic dextrose injections disperse quickly and do not offer significant elevation, whereas polymers such as gelatin and alginate are challenging to inject.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeep cutaneous wounds, which are difficult to heal and specifically occur on dynamic body surfaces, remain a substantial healthcare challenge in clinical practice because of multiple underlying factors, including excessive reactive oxygen species, potential bacterial infection, and extensive degradation of the extracellular matrix (ECM) which further leads to the progressive deterioration of the wound microenvironment. Any available individual wound therapy, such as antibiotic-loaded cotton gauze, cannot address all these issues. Engineering an advanced multifunctional wound dressing is the current need to promote the overall healing process of such wounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInjectable polymeric hydrogels delivered via endoscopic catheter have emerged as promising submucosal agents, offering durable, long-lasting cushions to enhance the efficacy of endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) for the removal of small, flat polyps from the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). However, polymer-based injections do not meet the easy-injectability criteria via catheter because their high viscosity tends to clog the catheter needle. To the best of knowledge, for the first time, report the fabrication of an amphiphile-based small molecule hydrogel of diglycerol monostearate (DGMS) that self-assembles to form hydrogel (DGMSH) for delivery via an endoscopic catheter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
November 2024
The effective management of deep skin wounds remains a significant healthcare challenge that often deteriorates with bacterial infection, oxidative stress, tissue necrosis, and excessive production of wound exudate. Current medical approaches, including traditional wound dressing materials, cannot effectively address these issues. There is a great need to engineer advanced and multifunctional wound dressings to address this multifaceted problem effectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe experimentally apply incoherent Fourier ptychography to enhance the resolution of recorded images by projecting known, uncorrelated, random patterns at high speed onto 3D moving and distant objects. We find that the resolution enhancement factor can be greater than 2, depending on the projection and camera optics.
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