“…To address these challenges with polyphenolic-containing extracts, and to employ a nano/microscale drug carrier that is fabricated by a “green” route that avoids relatively toxic reagents, we have encapsulated ethanolic extracts of Equisetum arvense (horsetail, itself a Si accumulator plant) into porous silicon (pSi) microparticles to increase their bioavailability. Such extracts were loaded into nanostructured pSi particles prepared by our previously optimized eco-friendly fabrication route from silicon accumulator plants. − Nanostructured pSi, typically prepared by anodization techniques, is an established drug delivery vehicle, , with broadly tunable porosities, surface functionalities, and resorptivity in vitro/in vivo. − Elemental pSi is utilized here rather than totally oxidized porous silica (SiO 2 ) platforms such as diatoms, , as pSi provides a relatively more tunable resorptive profile as well as greater photostability of the active therapeutic within the pores . In this study, the potential utility of pSi microparticles derived from tabasheer (Concretio silicea bambusae) loaded with ethanolic leaf extracts of E.…”