Induction heating and controlled drug release from thermosensitive magnetic microgels
POSTER
Abstract
Poly-N-isopropyl acrylamide (PNIPAM) is a biocompatible thermosensitive polymer that exhibits reversible volume phase transition from a hydrophilic coil to hydrophobic globule at the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of 32 $^{\circ}$C. To stimulate conformational change we introduced magnetite nanoparticles (size $\sim $12 nm) in the PNIPAM matrix. The PNIPAM/magnetite nanoparticles composite was then exposed to an alternating magnetic field at a frequency of 380 kHz to induce heating in the nanoparticles by Neel and Brownian relaxations. We report \textit{in vitro} controlled release of anti-cancer drug mitoxantrone which was loaded into PNIPAM/magnetite nanoparticles composite, driven solely by the heating induced by the external magnetic field. We found that the drug released reached 4{\%} in only 4 minutes of heating to 50 $^{\circ}$C. We also present results on dielectric and magnetic anomalies near the LCST of the PNIPAM-Fe$_{3}$O$_{4}$ composite.
Authors
-
R. Regmi
Wayne State University
-
S.R. Bhattarai
Wayne State University
-
Sudakar C.
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Wayne State University, Wayne State University, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI
-
A.S. Wani
Wayne State University
-
R. Cunninghum
Kettering University
-
P.P. Vaishnava
Kettering University
-
R. Naik
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Wayne State University, Wayne State University
-
D. Oupicky
Wayne State University
-
G. Lawes
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Wayne State University, Wayne State University