AI Article Synopsis

  • The treatment of diseased blood vessels is complicated due to the mechanical damage caused by traditional drug-eluting device implantation.
  • Marine mussels' strong underwater adhesives inspired the development of a new drug-eluting bioadhesive gel that can securely attach to the inner surface of blood vessels.
  • In tests on a mouse model of atherosclerosis, this gel effectively reduced inflammation and stabilized dangerous plaques, suggesting a promising method for delivering treatment directly to problem areas in the vasculature.

Article Abstract

The treatment of diseased vasculature remains challenging, in part because of the difficulty in implanting drug-eluting devices without subjecting vessels to damaging mechanical forces. Implanting materials using adhesive forces could overcome this challenge, but materials have previously not been shown to durably adhere to intact endothelium under blood flow. Marine mussels secrete strong underwater adhesives that have been mimicked in synthetic systems. Here we develop a drug-eluting bioadhesive gel that can be locally and durably glued onto the inside surface of blood vessels. In a mouse model of atherosclerosis, inflamed plaques treated with steroid-eluting adhesive gels had reduced macrophage content and developed protective fibrous caps covering the plaque core. Treatment also lowered plasma cytokine levels and biomarkers of inflammation in the plaque. The drug-eluting devices developed here provide a general strategy for implanting therapeutics in the vasculature using adhesive forces and could potentially be used to stabilize rupture-prone plaques.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3535589PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1217972110DOI Listing

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