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Research ArticleConference Proceedings

Issues in Drug Delivery: Concepts and Practice

Ted B Martonen, Hugh D Smyth, Kristin K Isaacs and Ray T Burton
Respiratory Care September 2005, 50 (9) 1228-1252;
Ted B Martonen
Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and with the Experimental Toxicology Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
PhD
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Hugh D Smyth
School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
PhD
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Kristin K Isaacs
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
PhD
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Ray T Burton
Lockheed Martin Information Technology, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
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Abstract

Understanding the transport and deposition of inhaled aerosols is of fundamental importance to inhalation therapy. Herein we address issues that affect drug delivery from experimental and theoretical perspectives. Accordingly, we shall limit our comments to a focused review of laboratory work (ie, an in vitro perspective) and the development of a computer-based 3-dimensional (3D) oral morphology with related computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and particle deposition studies (ie, an “in silico” perspective). To describe the oral region, morphometric data from the literature were employed. With Maya Unlimited, a third-party animation software package, coronal images were used to create initial spline curves, which served as the foundation of a nonuniform rational B-spline surface, representing a 3D morphology. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first medical application of Maya Unlimited. We have demonstrated that the code can be employed to construct 3D biological structures and perform 3D CFD simulations of aerosols from dry powder inhalers and metered-dose inhalers. A study was also conducted using Fluent, a commercially available software package that has been used extensively in our laboratory for 3D CFD computations. The Maya Unlimited software can generate physiologically realistic oral structures; it has great potential for use in the medical arena, because it requires neither advanced technical training nor substantial peripheral (eg, hardware) support, it allows for the introduction of medical devices (eg, dry powder inhalers) into simulations, and it predicts 3D CFD patterns consistent with experimental observations and results of more rigorous software (Fluent). In the in vitro perspective we considered numerous salient topics, including the performances of dry powder inhalers and metered-dose inhalers, their respective operating characteristics, and relevance to in vivo data. We advocate that 3D CFD software be employed in a complementary manner, in real time, with aerosol therapy protocols in the medical arena, to promote the targeted delivery of inhaled drugs and thereby enhance their efficacies.

  • in silico modeling
  • computer morphology
  • particle dosimetry
  • metered-dose inhaler
  • MDI
  • dry powder inhaler
  • DPI
  • simulation
  • inhaled drugs

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Ted B Martonen PhD, Experimental Toxicology Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711. E-mail: martonen.ted{at}epa.gov.
  • Copyright © 2005 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.
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Respiratory Care: 50 (9)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 50, Issue 9
1 Sep 2005
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Issues in Drug Delivery: Concepts and Practice
Ted B Martonen, Hugh D Smyth, Kristin K Isaacs, Ray T Burton
Respiratory Care Sep 2005, 50 (9) 1228-1252;

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Issues in Drug Delivery: Concepts and Practice
Ted B Martonen, Hugh D Smyth, Kristin K Isaacs, Ray T Burton
Respiratory Care Sep 2005, 50 (9) 1228-1252;
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Keywords

  • in silico modeling
  • computer morphology
  • particle dosimetry
  • metered-dose inhaler
  • MDI
  • dry powder inhaler
  • DPI
  • simulation
  • inhaled drugs

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