Chitosan has been used to cross-link poly(acrylic acid) to give three pH-sensitive hydrogels designed to control the release of the drugs amoxicillin and meloxicam. The extent of cross-linking and solution pH was found to dominate the swelling behavior of these hydrogels as shown by scanning electron microscopy and swelling time dependencies. The rates of release of amoxicillin and meloxicam from the loaded hydrogels increased with increase in pH consistent with the extent of hydrogen bonding between hydrogel components and between the hydrogel and the drugs being important determinants of release rate. Both the Korsemeyer-Peppas and Weibull models fitted release data consistent with drug release occurred through a combination of drug diffusion and hydrogel relaxation processes. These hydrogels appear to provide an ideal basis for controlled drug delivery systems.
The immobilization of bovine serum albumins (BSA) onto cationic spherical polyelectrolyte brushes (SPB) consisting of a solid polystyrene (PS) core and a densely grafted poly(2-aminoethyl methacrylate hydrochloride) (PAEMH) shell was studied by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The observed dynamics of adsorption of BSA onto SPB by time-resolved SAXS can be divided into two stages. In the first stage (tens of milliseconds), the added proteins as in-between bridge instantaneously caused the aggregation of SPB. Then BSA penetrated into the brush layer driven by electrostatic attractions, and reached equilibrium in the second stage (tens of seconds). The amount of BSA immobilized onto brush layer reached the maximum when pH was increased to about 6.1 and BSA concentration to 10 g/L. The cationic SPB were confirmed to provide stronger adsorption capacity for BSA compared to anionic ones.
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