Eur J Pharm Biopharm
December 2024
Freeze-drying enables delicate, heat-sensitive biomaterials to be stored in a dry form even at room temperature. However, exposure to physicochemical stress induced by freeze-drying presents challenges for maintaining material characteristics and functionality upon reconstitution, for which reason excipients are required. Although wide variety of different excipients are available for pharmaceutical applications, their protective role in the freeze-drying is not yet fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCultivated peatlands are important for grass production in Northern Europe, but the potential impact of nutrients leaching to surface waters is a major concern. Due to a lack of data on nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and organic carbon leaching, a monitoring programme was established at Ruukki (Siikajoki, Finland), an agricultural, subsurface drained peat site with a peat thickness of 20-80 cm. Concentrations and loading of N, P, and total organic carbon (TOC) were monitored, along with other water quality parameters for the field discharge, in 2018-2021.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomaterial aerogel fabrication by freeze-drying must be further improved to reduce the costs of lengthy freeze-drying cycles and to avoid the formation of spongy cryogels and collapse of the aerogel structures. Residual water content is a critical quality attribute of the freeze-dried product, which can be monitored in-line with near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy. Predictive models of NIR have not been previously applied for biomaterials and the models were mostly focused on the prediction of only one formulation at a time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe off-site effects of agricultural organic soils include the leaching of N, P, and organic carbon (OC) to watercourses and CO, CH, and NO emissions into the atmosphere. The aim of this study was to quantify how the thickness of organic layers affects these loads. A 19.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHydrogels, natural and synthetic origin, are actively studied for their use for implants and payload carriers. These biomaterials for delivery systems have enormous potential in basic biomedical research, drug development, and long-term delivery of biologics. Nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) hydrogels, both natural and anionic (ANFC) ones, allow drug loading for immediate and controlled release via the slow drug dissolution of solid drug crystals into hydrogel and its subsequent release.
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