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              Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
 - Outline
 - Hydrogels: definition
 - Hydrogels
 - Stimuli-responsive hydrogels
 - Hydrogels: classification
 - Hydrogels: degree of swelling
 - Types of water in swollen gel
 - Different types of water can be quantified by DSC
 - Drug reservoir delivery system
 - Hydrogel matrix delivery system
 - Stimuli-responsive delivery system
 - Hydrogels for drug delivery
 - Supramolecular hydrogels
 - Quantum dot-DNA hybrid hydrogels
 - Stimuli-responsive hydrogels
 - Types of hydrogel products & routes of administration
 - Clinical applications
 - Applications in cardiac tissue engineering (1)
 - Applications in cardiac tissue engineering (2)
 - Applications in cardiac tissue engineering (3)
 - Conclusions
 - Thank you for listening!
 
Topics Covered
- Hydrogels
 - Types of hydrogels
 - Properties of Hydrogels
 - Stimuli-responsive hydrogels
 - Classification of hydrogels
 - Degree of swelling and types of water in swollen gels
 - Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC)
 - Drug delivery systems
 - Supramolecular hydrogels
 - Quantum dot-DNA hybrid hydrogels
 - Hydrogel products
 - Routes of administration
 - Medical applications of hydrogels
 - Applications in cardiac tissue engineering
 
Talk Citation
Deen, G.R. and Safar, D. (2022, May 30). Polymeric gels for drug delivery [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 4, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/GBRP3774.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
- Published on May 30, 2022
 
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. G. Roshan Deen has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
 - Ms. Dora Safar has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
 
Other Talks in the Series: Drug Delivery
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
      
      
        
                  0:00
                
                
                  
                    Hello, I am Dora Safar from
the School of Medicine
                  
                    at the Royal College of
Surgeons in Ireland.
                  
                    I am attached to the Soft
Matter Research Group
                  
                    at the Royal College of
Surgeons in Ireland.
                  
                    This is led by Dr. Roshan Deen.
                  
                    The main focus of the
research group is to develop
                  
                    new types of hydrogels for
biomedical applications.
                  
                    My research interest is in
developing new types of
                  
                    hydrogels for drug delivery
                  
                    and tissue engineering
applications.
                  
                    In this lecture, I
will be presenting
                  
                    a review of polymeric
gels for drug delivery.
                  
                    I will be presenting a
variety of polymeric gels
                  
                    that are used for
controlled drug delivery
                  
                    and I will highlight some
of the main examples.
                  
                
              
                  0:43
                
                
                  
                    The outline of this lecture
will be the following.
                  
                    We will start with
hydrogels and properties,
                  
                    then we will move on to the
classification of hydrogels.
                  
                    Then I will talk about the
swelling of hydrogels and
                  
                    the types of water that are
present in swollen gels.
                  
                    After this,
                  
                    we will look at some major
drug delivery systems.
                  
                    This will be followed by the medical
applications of a few hydrogels.
                  
                
              
                  1:07
                
                
                  
                    By definition,
                  
                    hydrogels are crosslinked
polymeric materials
                  
                    that can absorb large
amounts of water
                  
                    or any physiological fluids.
                  
                    For any controlled drug
delivery application,
                  
                    this swelling is the
fundamental property.
                  
                    For a material to be
considered a hydrogel,
                  
                    it should contain at
least 10% of water
                  
                    by weight or by volume.
                  
                    When the water content
is more than 95%,
                  
                    the hydrogel is called a
superabsorbent hydrogel.
                  
                    The most common example
of a superabsorbent
                  
                    is baby diapers.
                  
                    A thin layer of a hydrogel
is used in baby diapers
                  
                    to absorb large
amounts of liquid.
                  
                    The structural integrity
of the swollen hydrogel
                  
                    is maintained by either
a physical crosslinking
                  
                    or a chemical crosslinking.
                  
                    The physical crosslinking
is non-permanent,
                  
                    whereas the chemical
crosslinking is permanent.
                  
                    The figure shown
illustrates that when you
                  
                    take a dry hydrogel
and place it in water,
                  
                    the hydrogel absorbs
the water and swells,
                  
                    becoming rubbery in nature.
                  
                    The blue spheres represent
the water molecules
                  
                    within the swollen hydrogel.