Polypropylene grafted with NIPAAm and APMA for creating hemocompatible surfaces that load/elute nalidixic acid


Abstract:

Polypropylene (PP) films grafted with N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) and N-(3-aminopropyl) methacrylamide hydrochloride (APMA) were tested as components of medical devices able to load and to sustain the release of the antimicrobial agent nalidixic acid. A pre-irradiation method was applied for grafting PP films with two NIPAAm:APMA weight ratios and to various extents. The grafting composition was analyzed recording FTIR-ATR spectra. PP-g-(1NIPAAm-r-0.5APMA) exhibited the temperature-responsiveness of PNIPAAm, while the grafting with a greater content in APMA led to that PP-g-(1NIPAAm-r-1APMA) remained highly swollen at 37 °C. The greater the content in APMA on the PP surface, the higher the amount of nalidixic acid loaded (up to 0.036 mg/cm2) and the slower the release rate in phosphate buffer pH 7.4. Coating with carboxymethyl-dextran (CM-dextran) of some drug-loaded films led to minor drug unloading while remarkably high amounts of dextran were deposited (up to 0.50 mg/cm2). This coating did not significantly modify the drug release rate neither the hemocompatibility of the PP-g-(NIPAAm-r-APMA) films, which was per se very good. Drug-loaded films remarkably inhibited the growth of Escherichia coli in in vitro microbiological tests. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Año de publicación:

2010

Keywords:

  • Nalidixic acid
  • N-isopropylacrylamide
  • Polypropylene
  • N-(3-Aminopropyl) methacrylamide
  • γ-Ray irradiation
  • Temperature-responsive swelling
  • Medicated medical device
  • Controlled release
  • Antimicrobial surface

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Biomateriales
  • Ciencia de materiales

Áreas temáticas:

  • Ingeniería y operaciones afines
  • Química analítica
  • Química y ciencias afines