Preparation of Medicated Polylactide Micropieces by Means of Ultrasonic Technology
Abstract
:Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Micromolding Equipment and Sample Preparation
2.3. Specimen Characterization
2.4. Calorimetric Properties
2.5. Release and Quantification
2.6. Inhibition of Bacterial Growth
3. Results
3.1. Set Up of Molding Conditions
- To find appropriate energy and molding force values to fill the whole mold. These were based with previous works carried out with neat PLA [7]. Through a visual inspection (the eight test specimens were fully molded or not), it could be concluded that working with an amplitude lower than 24 µm was not enough to reach an appropriate flow of PLA (Table 1). In reference to the molding force, a value above 300 N was needed to get the eight specimens full. However, caution should be taken into account since forces around 500–600 N were not stable and, in some cases, the sonotrode was overloaded (i.e., it cannot vibrate) due to a high PLA compaction.
- To compare the molecular weight of molded sample with the original polymer. One of the main issues of this process is the possibility of polymer degradation (i.e., rupture of the polymer chain in oligomers) that could compromise the final physical properties of the molded specimen [9]. GPC measurements of samples processed under different conditions are summarized in Table 1. PLA seems to be very flexible with the molding condition in comparison with other polymers [13]. Molecular weight variation was not detected for the applied range of force. However, the increase of the molding time caused a significant degradation. It can be assumed that a molding time equal or lower than 1.2 s may cause a minimum degradation of PLA.
- To confirm that chemical structure of the polymer molded keeps the FTIR spectrum of a PLA specimen molded unaltered at the optimized condition of 300 N 1.2 s 24 µm, according to the filling efficiency and GPC assay, were compared with the spectrum of commercial powdered PLA (Figure 3). It is clear that the ultrasonic source has not given rise to any significant modification of the chemical structure of the polymer. The typical bands of ester (1745, 1266 and 1108 cm−1) and methylene groups (1455 cm−1 and 1380 cm−1) remained unchanged.
- To check by visual inspection the presence of fissures and cracks inside the processed samples, features that may affect the final mechanical properties of specimens. Figure 4 shows SEM micrographs of the processed sample under optimal parameters where significant physical defects cannot be detected.
3.2. Characterization of PLA Specimens Loaded with Drugs
3.3. Calorimetric Characterization
- Specimens prepared by ultrasound micromolding showed relaxation endothermic overshoots over Tg, which indicated that the heating rate in DSC scan was higher than the previous cooling rate during glass formation. The observed peaks are complex but were minimized in the second heating run. It should be pointed out that relaxation peaks were not associated with a potential fusion of loaded drugs (55 °C for TCS and 134 °C for CHX) since they were also detected for unloaded PLA.
- All samples showed exothermic cold crystallization peaks, which were higher for the micromolded specimens as a consequence of their higher amorphous content. The associated enthalpy clearly increased also when drugs were loaded and even were split into two peaks for loads around 6 wt-%.
- The melting process was similar for all PLA samples and those loaded with 3 wt-% of CHX. This fusion was characterized by a complex melting peak with a shoulder at 164 °C and a main peak at 170 °C as it is well described. The melting enthalpy was also comparable, indicating that a similar degree of crystallinity was achieved after cold crystallization. Nevertheless, the second heating run of the sample loaded with 6 wt-% of CHX showed a melting peak with a clearly lower enthalpy (i.e., 21.65 J/g with respect to 38.09 J/g measured for the melt crystallized PLA sample), lower melting peak temperature (157 °C with respect to 168–170 °C) and a higher temperature for the cold crystallization peak (i.e., 125 °C with respect to 114–118 °C). The different behavior of such sample is in agreement with the above-mentioned degradation process that should be maximum at the end of the second heating run due to the considerable exposure to high temperatures (i.e., during the performed heating and cooling runs) and also demonstrates the clear loss of properties.
3.4. Drug Load and Release
3.5. Antibacterial Properties of CHX and TCS Loaded Micromolded Pieces
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Molding b | Efficiency (%) c | Mn (g/mol) | Mw (g/mol) | Mw/Mn |
---|---|---|---|---|
Raw | ------- | 43,000 | 69,100 | 1.64 |
24-200-1.5 | 40 | 35,400 | 69,700 | 1.96 |
24-300-1 | 100 | 34,500 | 68,600 | 1.98 |
24-300-1.2 | 100 | 38,800 | 72,200 | 1.88 |
24-300-3 | 100 | 32,200 | 64,300 | 2.01 |
24-400-1 | 80 | ------- | ------- | ------- |
24-400-1.5 | 100 | 37,700 | 71,300 | 1.89 |
24-500-1.5 | -Ovl- | 33,900 | 67,500 | 1.99 |
24-600-1.5 | -Ovl- | ------- | ------- | ------- |
Drug %-wt | Chlorhexidine | Triclosan | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Elongation at Break (%) | Young Modulus (MPa) | Elongation at Break (%) | Young Modulus (MPa) | |
0 | 9.13 ± 1.4 | 1565 ± 127 | 9.13 ± 1.4 | 1565 ± 130 |
0.5 | 8.19 ± 1.0 | 1456 ± 145 | 9.11 ± 1.0 | 1558 ± 120 |
1 | 8.35 ± 0.9 | 1416 ± 264 | 9.61 ±0.8 | 1510 ± 135 |
1.5 | 8.03 ± 1.3 | 1414 ± 161 | 9.95 ± 0.5 | 1445 ± 190 |
2 | 7.26 ± 1.1 | 1401 ± 132 | 10.01 ± 0.7 | 1411 ± 160 |
2.5 | 6.09 ± 1.3 | 1357 ± 161 | 10.19 ± 0.8 | 1393 ± 110 |
3 | 5.33 ± 0.8 | 1243 ± 152 | 10.21 ± 0.6 | 1388 ± 170 |
4 | 4.97 ± 1.0 | 1145 ± 139 | 10.50 ± 0.4 | 1380 ± 140 |
6 | 4.34 ± 0.7 | 1146 ± 120 | 10.62 ± 0.4 | 1383 ± 150 |
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Olmo, C.; Franco, L.; del Valle, L.J.; Puiggalí, J. Preparation of Medicated Polylactide Micropieces by Means of Ultrasonic Technology. Appl. Sci. 2019, 9, 2360. https://doi.org/10.3390/app9112360
Olmo C, Franco L, del Valle LJ, Puiggalí J. Preparation of Medicated Polylactide Micropieces by Means of Ultrasonic Technology. Applied Sciences. 2019; 9(11):2360. https://doi.org/10.3390/app9112360
Chicago/Turabian StyleOlmo, Cristian, Lourdes Franco, Luis J. del Valle, and Jordi Puiggalí. 2019. "Preparation of Medicated Polylactide Micropieces by Means of Ultrasonic Technology" Applied Sciences 9, no. 11: 2360. https://doi.org/10.3390/app9112360
APA StyleOlmo, C., Franco, L., del Valle, L. J., & Puiggalí, J. (2019). Preparation of Medicated Polylactide Micropieces by Means of Ultrasonic Technology. Applied Sciences, 9(11), 2360. https://doi.org/10.3390/app9112360