In Vitro and In Vivo Characterization of MEMS Microneedles
Male
Miniaturization
Microinjections
Injections, Subcutaneous
Equipment Design
Administration, Cutaneous
Streptozocin
Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental
Rats
Equipment Failure Analysis
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
03 medical and health sciences
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
Needles
Animals
Insulin
DOI:
10.1007/s10544-005-6171-y
Publication Date:
2005-04-14T08:28:36Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Transdermal drug delivery TDD systems have many advantages but are conventionally limited by the low permeability of skin. The idea of using microneedles to painlessly penetrate the topmost impermeable stratum corneum has previously been put forward. In this paper, the fabrication of solid and hollow silicon microneedles with straight side-walls and with the following dimensions: 20-100 microm in diameter and 100-150 microm in length is described. In vitro tests demonstrate that with prior solid microneedle application, transdermal drug transport is significantly increased by 10-20 times, with the degree of enhancement being related to needle diameter. In vivo tests in diabetic animals, however, were unable to demonstrate any delivery of insulin through the hollow microneedles. It is proposed that two factors, microneedle length and tip sharpness, have to be improved for systemic drug delivery to be seen in vivo.
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