posted on 2024-11-23, 05:46authored byAisha Qi, James Friend, Leslie YeoLeslie Yeo
Pulmonary drug delivery transports the drug formulations directly to the respiratory tract in the form of inhaled particles or droplets. Because of the direct target treatment, it has significant advantages in the treatment of respiratory diseases, for example asthma. However, it is difficult to produce monodispersed particles/droplets in the 1¿10 micron range, which is necessary for deposition in the targeted lung area or lower respiratory airways, in a controllable fashion. We demonstrate the use of surface acoustic waves (SAWs) as an efficient method for the generation of monodispersed micron dimension aerosols for the treatment of asthma. SAWs are ten nanometer order amplitude electroacoustic waves generated by applying an oscillating electric field to an interdigital transducer patterned on a piezoelectric substrate. The acoustic energy in the waves induces atomization of the working fluid, which contains a model drug, albuterol. Laser diffraction techniques employed to characterize the aerosols revealed mean diameter of the aerosol was around 3¿4 ?m. Parallel experiments employing a one-stage (glass) twin impinger as a lung model demonstrated a nearly 80% of atomized drug aerosol was deposited in the lung. The aerosol size distribution is relatively independent of the SAW frequency, which is consistent with our predictive scaling theory which accounts for the dominant balance between viscous and capillary stresses. Moreover, only 1¿3 W powers consumption of SAW atomization suggests that the SAW atomizer can be miniaturized into dimensions commensurate with portable consumer devices
ISBN - Is published in 9780819475220 (urn:isbn:9780819475220)
Start page
1
End page
10
Total pages
10
Outlet
Proceedings of SPIE Conference on Biomedical Applications of Micro- and Nanoengineering IV and Complex Systems Vol. 7270, 10-12 December 2008,Melbourne, VIC
Name of conference
Proceedings of SPIE Conference on Biomedical Applications of Micro- and Nanoengineering IV and Complex Systems