Miguel A. Rodrigues, Carla Ferreira, João P. Borges, Beatriz G. Bernardes, Ana L. Oliveira, José D. Santos and Maria A. Lopes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bone defect healing is often compromised by infections acquired during surgery, hindering regeneration. An effective solution should first prevent infection and then promote bone repair. Localised drug-delivery systems capable of dual and sequential release of antimicrobial and bone-regenerative agents represent a promising solution; however, precisely controlling this sequential release remains an unmet challenge. To address this issue, this study explores a novel approach by developing delivery systems based on either hollow or non-hollow porous bioceramics with an alginate hydrogel matrix, resulting in cutting-edge systems with a controlled, stage-specific release of antimicrobial and bone regenerative agents that meet the clinical needs. Gentamicin served as the antimicrobial agent, while raloxifene and/or alendronate represented hydrophobic and hydrophilic bone-regenerative agents. The systems were evaluated for release profiles, kinetic modelling, and the effects of lyophilisation and sterilisation (using ethylene oxide or supercritical CO2) on drug stability and release kinetics. The release followed a precise dual-sequential pattern: gentamicin was released over 2–3 weeks, followed by another 2–3 weeks of bone-regenerative agents. Kinetic model fitting showed that gentamicin release was driven mainly by diffusion (with or without hydrogel swelling), and raloxifene/alendronate release was dominated by a mixture of diffusion and polymeric matrix swelling/erosion. Lyophilisation and sterilisation preserved release profiles, though timeframes shifted slightly, with supercritical CO2 causing minimal delay. Gentamicin retained strong antimicrobial activity post-processing, confirming the system's potential for infection control and bone repair.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B & C cover high quality studies across all fields of materials chemistry. The journals focus on those theoretical or experimental studies that report new understanding, applications, properties and synthesis of materials. Journal of Materials Chemistry A, B & C are separated by the intended application of the material studied. Broadly, applications in energy and sustainability are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry A, applications in biology and medicine are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry B, and applications in optical, magnetic and electronic devices are of interest to Journal of Materials Chemistry C.Journal of Materials Chemistry B is a Transformative Journal and Plan S compliant. Example topic areas within the scope of Journal of Materials Chemistry B are listed below. This list is neither exhaustive nor exclusive:
Antifouling coatings
Biocompatible materials
Bioelectronics
Bioimaging
Biomimetics
Biomineralisation
Bionics
Biosensors
Diagnostics
Drug delivery
Gene delivery
Immunobiology
Nanomedicine
Regenerative medicine & Tissue engineering
Scaffolds
Soft robotics
Stem cells
Therapeutic devices