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Novel silica-coated iron–carbon composite particles and their targeting effect as a drug carrier

✍ Scribed by Hongming Cao; Jun Gan; Shufen Wang; Shaofeng Xuan; Qiufang Wu; Chunzhong Li; Chuntao Wu; Chengen Hu; Guangjian Huang


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
312 KB
Volume
86A
Category
Article
ISSN
1549-3296

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Novel silica‐coated iron–carbon composite particles were prepared to be used in the targeting therapy as a drug carrier. The composite particles with diameter of 200–300 nm were obtained successfully via high‐energy planetary ball milling and hydrogen reduction processes. The composite particles possess the advantages of activated carbon and magnetic Fe, exhibiting excellent drug adsorption and desorption abilities as well as powerfully magnetic targeting. In in vivo experiment, ^99m^TcO~4~‐adsorbed composite particles showed prominent biodistribution in the left hepatic lobe of pigs under the control of an external magnetic field. The amount of doxorubicin content of hepatic tissue was 23.8 times higher in targeted area of the left lobe than that in the nontargeted area of the right lobe when doxorubicin‐adsorbed composite particles were infused intra‐arterially. These results also suggest that the composite particles could penetrate through the capillary wall around tissue interstitium and hepatic cells under the driving of an external magnetic force in targeting area, indicating that the novel silica‐coated iron–carbon composite particles could be a potential application in targeted treatment for some kinds of tumor as an effective drug carrier. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res 2008