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1.
Adv Healthc Mater ; 10(11): e2100069, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33951320

ABSTRACT

Despite decades of biomedical advances, the colonization of implant devices with bacterial biofilms is still a leading cause of implant failure. Clearly, new strategies and materials that suppress both initial and later stage bacterial colonization are required in this context. Ideal would be the implementation of a bactericidal functionality in the implants that is temporally and spatially triggered in an autonomous fashion at the infection site. Herein, the fabrication and validation of functional titanium-based implants with triggered antibiotic release function afforded via an intelligent polymer coating is reported. In particular, thermo-responsive poly(di(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate) (PDEGMA) brushes on titanium implants synthesized via a surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerization with activators regenerated through the electron transfer technique (ARGET ATRP) allows for a controlled and thermally triggered release of the antibiotic levofloxacin at the wound site. Antibiotic loaded brushes are investigated as a function of thickness, loading capacity for antibiotics, and temperature. At temperatures of the infection site >37 °C the lower critical solution temperature behavior of the brushes afforded the triggered release. Hence, in addition to the known antifouling effects, the PDEGMA coating ensured enhanced bactericidal effects, as demonstrated in initial in vivo tests with rodents infected with Staphylococcus aureus.


Subject(s)
Polymers , Titanium , Biofilms , Drug Liberation , Methacrylates
2.
Nano Lett ; 16(6): 3885-91, 2016 06 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27215487

ABSTRACT

Sound perception via mechano-sensation is a remarkably sensitive and fast transmission process, converting sound as a mechanical input to neural signals in a living organism. Although knowledge of auditory hair cell functions has advanced over the past decades, challenges remain in understanding their biomechanics, partly because of their biophysical complexity and the lack of appropriate probing tools. Most current studies of hair cells have been conducted in a relatively low-frequency range (<1000 Hz); therefore, fast kinetic study of hair cells has been difficult, even though mammalians have sound perception of 20 kHz or higher. Here, we demonstrate that the magnetic force nanoprobe (MFN) has superb spatiotemporal capabilities to mechanically stimulate spatially-targeted individual hair cells with a temporal resolution of up to 9 µs, which is equivalent to approximately 50 kHz; therefore, it is possible to investigate avian hair cell biomechanics at different tonotopic regions of the cochlea covering a full hearing frequency range of 50 to 5000 Hz. We found that the variation of the stimulation frequency and amplitude of hair bundles creates distinct mechanical responsive features along the tonotopic axis, where the kinetics of the hair bundle recovery motion exhibits unique frequency-dependent characteristics: basal, middle, and apical hair bundles can effectively respond at their respective ranges of frequency. We revealed that such recovery kinetics possesses two different time constants that are closely related to the passive and active motilities of hair cells. The use of MFN is critical for the kinetics study of free-standing hair cells in a spatiotemporally distinct tonotopic organization.


Subject(s)
Hair Cells, Auditory/physiology , Magnetite Nanoparticles/chemistry , Sound , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Chickens , Kinetics , Magnetic Fields , Magnets , Particle Size , Surface Properties
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