Abstract

In order to clarify the relationship between the crosslinked structure of thermo-responsive polymer and drug release profile, polymer gels based on acryloyl-L-proline methyl ester (A-ProOMe) were synthesized in a mixture of water and acetone by the following two methods: a simultaneously occurring process of radiation-induced polymerization and crosslinking without a crosslinker (self-bridging method), and radiation-induced polymerization in the presence of the crosslinker tetradecaethylene glycol dimethacrylate (cosslinker method). The pronounced gap in thermo-response between two A-ProOMe gels, with an apparent degree of crosslinking of 11 for 1-propanol, shows a different shrinking pattern in the initial stage of time. The gels, which were obtained with the self-bridging method and the crosslinker method, were kept constant at a swelling ratio of 17 in water at 0°C for all systems. However, those values fell to 0.5 and 4, respectively, at 10 min after the temperature was increased to 37°C. The release mechanism of ketoprofen from two gel devices showed an anomalous (non-Fickian) transport, in which the release of ketoprofen with a low water-solubility could be directly related to the rapid release of water accompanying a gel shrinkage.

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