Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting

In recent years, extensive research has been done to find innovative ways of drug delivery to replace traditional injection using hypodermic needles. Although microneedles are proposed to provide one of the most effective and convenient transdermal drug delivery methods, their expensive fabrication...

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Main Author: Mansoor, Iman
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24454
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-244542014-03-26T03:36:15Z Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting Mansoor, Iman In recent years, extensive research has been done to find innovative ways of drug delivery to replace traditional injection using hypodermic needles. Although microneedles are proposed to provide one of the most effective and convenient transdermal drug delivery methods, their expensive fabrication techniques have created a barrier for their mass fabrication and as a result, their entry to the commercial market. A novel method, based on solvent casting, is presented for inexpensive fabrication of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles. Microneedles are formed during a solvent evaporation process which leaves a thick polymer layer around pillars in a pre-fabricated mold. This process is fast and allows fabrication of microneedles in variety of shapes and dimensions. The effectiveness of the microneedle arrays fabricated using this process has been demonstrated through in vivo and in vitro experiments. In order to further optimize the microneedle design, a novel experimental method based on confocal microscopy and particle image velocimetry (PIV) is presented for characterizing the flow in a thin film during solvent casting. Using this method, the impact of temperature on polymer film formation, on a vertical profile in a mold, is investigated and discussed. This method also allowed observing some important phenomena during solvent casting such as a surface counter flow. The PIV measurements show significant differences in the flow velocity fields at different temperatures that correlate with different final polymer thicknesses on the vertical wall of the mold. 2010-05-05T14:10:21Z 2010-11-30 2009 2010-05-05T14:10:21Z 2009-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24454 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description In recent years, extensive research has been done to find innovative ways of drug delivery to replace traditional injection using hypodermic needles. Although microneedles are proposed to provide one of the most effective and convenient transdermal drug delivery methods, their expensive fabrication techniques have created a barrier for their mass fabrication and as a result, their entry to the commercial market. A novel method, based on solvent casting, is presented for inexpensive fabrication of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles. Microneedles are formed during a solvent evaporation process which leaves a thick polymer layer around pillars in a pre-fabricated mold. This process is fast and allows fabrication of microneedles in variety of shapes and dimensions. The effectiveness of the microneedle arrays fabricated using this process has been demonstrated through in vivo and in vitro experiments. In order to further optimize the microneedle design, a novel experimental method based on confocal microscopy and particle image velocimetry (PIV) is presented for characterizing the flow in a thin film during solvent casting. Using this method, the impact of temperature on polymer film formation, on a vertical profile in a mold, is investigated and discussed. This method also allowed observing some important phenomena during solvent casting such as a surface counter flow. The PIV measurements show significant differences in the flow velocity fields at different temperatures that correlate with different final polymer thicknesses on the vertical wall of the mold.
author Mansoor, Iman
spellingShingle Mansoor, Iman
Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
author_facet Mansoor, Iman
author_sort Mansoor, Iman
title Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
title_short Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
title_full Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
title_fullStr Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
title_full_unstemmed Development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
title_sort development of hollow out-of-plane polymer microneedles using solvent casting
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24454
work_keys_str_mv AT mansooriman developmentofhollowoutofplanepolymermicroneedlesusingsolventcasting
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