Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir

The relationship of high and low molecular weight mannuronic acid (M)- and guluronic acid (G)-rich alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier was elucidated. Nanoparticles were prepared through ionotropic gelation using Ca2 +, and then in vitro physicochemical attributes and in vivo antidiabeti...

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Main Author: Kadir, Aminah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/1/TM_AMINAH%20KADIR%20PH%2015_5%201.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.138532022-03-01T02:25:59Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/ Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir Kadir, Aminah Oral and dental medicine. Pathology. Diseases Pharmaceutical technology The relationship of high and low molecular weight mannuronic acid (M)- and guluronic acid (G)-rich alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier was elucidated. Nanoparticles were prepared through ionotropic gelation using Ca2 +, and then in vitro physicochemical attributes and in vivo antidiabetic characteristics were examined. The alginate nanoparticles had insulin release retarded when the matrices had high alginate-to-insulin ratio or strong alginate-insulin interaction via O-H moiety. High molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles were characterized by assemblies of long polymer chains that enabled insulin encapsulation with weaker polymer-drug interaction than nanoparticles prepared from other alginate grades. They were able to encapsulate and yet release and have insulin absorbed into systemic circulation, thereby lowering rat blood glucose. High molecular weight G- and low molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles showed remarkable polymer-insulin interaction. This retarded the drug release and negated its absorption. Blood glucose lowering was, however, demonstrated in vivo with insulin-free matrices of these nanoparticles because of the strong alginate-glucose binding that led to intestinal glucose retention. Alginate nanoparticles can be used as oral insulin carrier or glucose binder in the treatment of diabetes as a function of its chemical composition. High molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles are a suitable vehicle for future development into oral insulin carrier 2015 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/1/TM_AMINAH%20KADIR%20PH%2015_5%201.pdf ID13853 Kadir, Aminah (2015) Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir. Masters thesis, thesis, Universiti Teknologi MARA.
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Oral and dental medicine. Pathology. Diseases
Pharmaceutical technology
spellingShingle Oral and dental medicine. Pathology. Diseases
Pharmaceutical technology
Kadir, Aminah
Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
description The relationship of high and low molecular weight mannuronic acid (M)- and guluronic acid (G)-rich alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier was elucidated. Nanoparticles were prepared through ionotropic gelation using Ca2 +, and then in vitro physicochemical attributes and in vivo antidiabetic characteristics were examined. The alginate nanoparticles had insulin release retarded when the matrices had high alginate-to-insulin ratio or strong alginate-insulin interaction via O-H moiety. High molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles were characterized by assemblies of long polymer chains that enabled insulin encapsulation with weaker polymer-drug interaction than nanoparticles prepared from other alginate grades. They were able to encapsulate and yet release and have insulin absorbed into systemic circulation, thereby lowering rat blood glucose. High molecular weight G- and low molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles showed remarkable polymer-insulin interaction. This retarded the drug release and negated its absorption. Blood glucose lowering was, however, demonstrated in vivo with insulin-free matrices of these nanoparticles because of the strong alginate-glucose binding that led to intestinal glucose retention. Alginate nanoparticles can be used as oral insulin carrier or glucose binder in the treatment of diabetes as a function of its chemical composition. High molecular weight M-rich alginate nanoparticles are a suitable vehicle for future development into oral insulin carrier
format Thesis
author Kadir, Aminah
author_facet Kadir, Aminah
author_sort Kadir, Aminah
title Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
title_short Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
title_full Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
title_fullStr Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
title_full_unstemmed Design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / Aminah Kadir
title_sort design of alginate nanoparticles as oral insulin carrier / aminah kadir
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/1/TM_AMINAH%20KADIR%20PH%2015_5%201.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/13853/
_version_ 1726795626055729152
score 13.188404