Abstract

AbstractPolymeric hydrogels capable of reversible swelling with changes in environmental temperature and pH were synthesized and studied as matrix systems capable of controlled release of antithrombotic drugs to the site of a blood clot. Monomers N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) and methacrylic acid (MAA) were chosen for the temperature- and pHdependent swelling characteristics of their polymers, respectively. Equilibrium swelling studies were performed as functions of pH and of temperature, and kinetic swelling studies were performed on the thermally responsive gels as a function of time after the gel was subjected to a step-change in temperature. Experimental results indicate that P(NIPAAmco- MAA) hydrogels can be synthesized so that they are either pH- or temperaturesensitive, depending upon the composition of the network. The pure PNIPAAm gels showed a lower critical solubility temperature (LCST) of around 32°C, below which the gel was in its swollen state, and above which the gel collapsed. As the amount of methacrylic acid in the gels was increased, the degree of swelling in deionized water decreased and the temperature sensitivity was lost. The hydrogels containing MAA displayed a transition in swelling behavior between pH 4 and 6. The mesh sizes of the hydrogel networks were calculated from the results of the swelling studies by Flory-Rehner theory. A kinetic experiment on the temperature-sensitive pure PNIPAAm hydrogel showed that the polymer network collapsed rapidly upon temperature changes across the LCST.

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