1st Edition

Drug Delivery Approaches and Nanosystems, Volume 2 Drug Targeting Aspects of Nanotechnology

    398 Pages 12 Color & 49 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    398 Pages 12 Color & 49 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    398 Pages 12 Color & 49 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    This volume is a thorough presentation of the state-of-the-art research and developments in drug delivery systems using nanotechnology and its applications. The second of this two-volume set, it addresses the applications of nanotechnology or nano-sized materials in the medical field and the real-world challenges and complexities of current drug delivery methodologies and techniques.



    This volume includes 11 chapters that focus on the targeting facet of drug delivery systems. Targeting is a focused maneuver to achieve the specified goals, including achieving the desired result and reaching the specific location. Targeting has now been successfully achieved for several diseases/disorders; however, its role is noteworthy in cancer treatment where chemotherapy is a main course of approach. Nanotechnology-based products have great potential by virtue of their inherent features.



    This edited book provides a detailed application of nanotechnology in drug delivery systems in health care. The book discusses general principles of drug targeting, material of construction and technological concerns of nanoparticles, and different drug delivery systems and their preparation.



    Taken together, the informative chapters will provide researchers and scientists as well as faculty and students with valuable research on the effective use of new approaches in advanced drug delivery nanosystems.



    Volume 1 of the two-volume series is subtitled Novel Drug Carriers. The volumes are available separately or as a set.

    Drug Targeting: General Aspects and Relevance to Nanotechnology

    Preethi Naik, Megha Marwah, Meenakshi Venkataraman, Gopal Singh Rajawat, and Mangal Nagarsenker

    Nano-Oncotargets and Innovative Therapies

    Yamuna Mohanram and Lakshmi Kiran Chelluri

    Dendrimer Conjugates as Novel DNA and SiRNA Carriers

    Yuya Hayashi, Keiichi Motoyama, Taishi Higashi, Hirofumi Jono, Yukio Ando, and Hidetoshi Arima

    Precise Preparation of Functional Polysaccharide Nanoparticles by Enzymatic Approach

    Jun-ichi Kadokawa

    Polysaccharide-Drug Nanoconjugates as Targeted Delivery Vehicles

    Sabyasachi Maiti

    Glycan-Based Nanocarries in Drug Delivery

    Songul Yasar Yildiz, Merve Erginer, Tuba Demirci, Juergen Hemberger, and Ebru Toksoy Oner

    Physiological and Clinical Considerations of Drug Delivery Systems Containing Carbon Nanotubes and Graphene

    Sami Makharza, Giuseppe Cirillo, Orazio Vittorio, and Silke Hampel

    Nanofibers: General Aspects and Applications

    Raghavendra Ramalingam and Kantha Deivi Arunachalam

    Nanocomposite Microparticles (nCmP) for Pulmonary Drug Delivery Applications

    Zimeng Wang, Elisa A. Torrico-Guzmán, Sweta K. Gupta, and Samantha A. Meenach

    Solid Lipid Nanoparticles for Topical Drug Delivery

    Sonia Trombino and Roberta Cassano

    Hydrophobized Polymers for Encapsulation of Amphotericin B in Nanoparticles

    Yoshiharu Kaneo

    Biography

    Raj K. Keservani, MPharm, is affiliated with the Sagar Institute of Research and Technology-Pharmacy, Bhopal, India. He has more than seven years of experience in pharmaceutical education at various institutes in India. He has published 30 peer-reviewed papers in the field of pharmaceutical sciences in national and international journals, fifteen book chapters, two co-authored books, and two edited books. He is also active as a reviewer for several international scientific journals. His research interests include nutraceutical and functional foods, novel drug delivery systems (NDDS), transdermal drug delivery, health science, cancer biology, and neurobiology.



    Anil K. Sharma, MPharm, is working as a lecturer at the Delhi Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Research, University of Delhi, India. He has more than six years of academic experience in pharmaceutical sciences. He has published 26 peer-reviewed papers in the field of pharmaceutical sciences in national and international journals, as well as 12 book chapters. His research interests encompass nutraceutical and functional foods, novel drug delivery systems (NDDS), drug delivery, nanotechnology, health science/life science, and biology/cancer biology/neurobiology.



    Rajesh K. Kesharwani, PhD, has more than seven years of research and two years of teaching experience at various institutes in India, imparting bioinformatics and biotechnology education. He has received several awards, including the NASI-Swarna Jayanti Puruskar-2013 by The National Academy of Sciences of India. He has authored over 32 peer-reviewed articles and ten book chapters. He has been a member of many scientific communities as well as a reviewer for many international journals. His research fields of interest are medical informatics, protein structure and function prediction, computer-aided drug designing, structural biology, drug delivery, cancer biology, and next-generation sequence analysis.