Enhancement strategies are necessary to improve the dermal/transdermal bioavailability of drugs applied to the skin due to its amazing barrier, the stratum corneum. Strategies to overcome this barrier, thus improving drug release to the skin include the use of penetration enhancers, specific delivery systems, supersaturated solutions and physical methods (iontophoresis, electroporation and ultrasound). Delivery of active agents to the skin by liposomal carriers has improved topical therapy in the field of dermatology. The interest in these carriers is based on their potential to enclose various types of biological materials and to deliver them to diverse cell types. Particularly, in recent years liposomes have been shown to be a promising drug-delivery system to the skin. Their use may produce several-fold higher drug concentrations in the epidermis and dermis and lower systemic concentrations when compared to conventional dosage forms. On the other hand, special characteristic vesicles like ethosomes, transfersomes and niosomes may be potential transdermal delivery systems for ionic molecules and polypeptides.
Asthma is a heterogeneous disease characterised by chronic airway inflammation. One of the most devastating consequences of this inflammatory process is the generation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species responsible for oxidative stress. The aim of this study is to analyse the efficiency of treatment with human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSC) in maintaining the oxidative balance in a murine model of allergic asthma by quantifying nitrotyrosine in lung tissues. After confirmation of asthma in the experimental model, samples of lung parenchyma were submitted to immunohistochemical assessment. Intravenous administration of hMSC reduced the levels of nitrotyrosine in the ASTHMA-hMSC group compared to those in the ASTHMA-SAL group. In conclusion, therapeutic administration of hMSC had a beneficial effect on oxidative stress, reducing the levels of nitrotyrosine in lung tissues in a model of allergic asthma.
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