Analysis: Overcoming Skin's Barrier: The Search for Effective and User-Friendly Drug Delivery
- 1 June 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics
- Vol. 3 (2) , 233-236
- https://doi.org/10.1089/152091501300209606
Abstract
Although hypodermic needles rapidly deliver large doses of drugs such as insulin across the skin for systemic administration, the pain, local trauma, and difficulty to achieve sustained or complex delivery profiles has motivated development of novel alternative technologies. Microneedles, jet injectors, and thermal poration make micron-scale holes in skin through which drugs can be driven in a user-friendly manner. Chemical enhancers, iontophoresis, electroporation, and ultrasound increase skin permeability by making submicron alterations in skin microstructure for continuous delivery over time.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Delivery of Insulin by Jet Injection: Recent ObservationsDiabetes Technology & Therapeutics, 2001
- Lack of Pain Associated with Microfabricated MicroneedlesPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,2001
- Microfabricated Microneedles for Gene and Drug DeliveryAnnual Review of Biomedical Engineering, 2000
- Comparing two methods of topical anesthesia used before intravenous cannulation in pediatric patientsJournal of Pediatric Health Care, 2000
- Fentanyl Delivery from an Electrotransport System: Delivery is a Function of Total Current, Not Duration of CurrentThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1998
- Transdermal delivery of fentanyl: rapid onset of analgesia using skin electroporationJournal of Controlled Release, 1998
- Ultrasound-Mediated Transdermal Protein DeliveryScience, 1995
- A Survey of Patient Preference for Insulin Jet Injectors Versus Needle and SyringeThe Diabetes Educator, 1992
- Blood glucose control in diabetic rats by transdermal iontophoretic delivery of insulinInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics, 1988
- Jet Injection of Insulin vs the Syringe-and-Needle MethodJAMA, 1966