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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Applied physics 56 (1993), S. 353-354 
    ISSN: 1432-0630
    Keywords: 73.40 ; 81.10 ; 81.15
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Incorporation of a thin insulating layer of polymer-like polyimide deposited by pulsed laser evaporation technique between metal and n-GaAs has resulted in diode structures with MIS and Schottky-barrier-type capacitance-voltage and current-voltage characteristics. These structures have the potential to be useful in improving the performance of GaAs FETs for microwave and high-speed applications.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pharmaceutical research 10 (1993), S. 1751-1755 
    ISSN: 1573-904X
    Keywords: transdermal ; iontophoresis ; noninvasive ; blood glucose ; monitoring ; biosensor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Solvent flow generated during iontophoresis can be used to convect neutral molecules through the skin, thereby greatly enhancing their flux. This concept was exploited to realize noninvasive glucose measurement by its iontophoretic extraction from the subcutaneous tissue. The hypothesis was tested in vitro using hairless mouse skin. The dermal surface was bathed with a glucose solution; chambers on the epidermal surface housed the current delivery electrodes. Iontophoresis (at 0.36 mA/cm2) was performed for 2 hr, at the end of which the solutions in contact with the electrodes were analyzed. The amount extracted was proportional to the glucose solution concentration bathing the dermis. Higher radioactivity levels were found at the anode than at the cathode, possibly because of glucose metabolism during its outward transport across the skin. Glucose biotransformation results in negatively charged metabolites which migrate to the anode. Two sensitive glucose sensors were developed; one was selective for glucose, the other for glucose and related compounds. Both sensors indicated the presence of glucose at the cathode but an abnormally high value was also recorded at the anode. This signal, however, was not due to glucose but rather to electroactive ascorbate withdrawn from the skin. Finally, a system has been developed with which glucose can be extracted noninvasively from the subcutaneous tissue and unambiguously measured. Whether iontophoretic glucose sampling in vivo will be equally suc-cessful remains to be answered.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pharmaceutical research 10 (1993), S. 1315-1320 
    ISSN: 1573-904X
    Keywords: electroosmosis ; hairless mouse skin ; iontophoresis ; mannitol ; skin permeability ; transdermal delivery ; water flux
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Enhanced flux of neutral solutes during transdermal iontophoresis is attributed largely to electroosmotic volume flow. In this study, the iontophoretic fluxes of tritiated water (3H2O) and 14C-labeled mannitol through hairless mouse skin (HMS) were determined. The following questions were addressed: (i) What is the variability of water flux during iontophoresis? (ii) To what extent is the iontophoretic flux of a neutral solute correlated with water flux? (iii) Does the intrinsic permeability of the skin to neutral solutes change following iontophoresis? (iv) What is the effect of low pH on electroosmotic volume flow? and (v) Does the skin remain permselective after removal of the stratum corneum? Transport of both water and mannitol reached steady-state levels during 10 hr of constant-current iontophoresis (0.36 mA/cm2). Anodal fluxes exceeded cathodal values. Cathodal mannitol flux was retarded, relative to passive transport, by net volume flow in the opposite direction, such that transport of this molecule increased significantly after the termination of current passage. Anodal equivalent volume flows for water and mannitol, respectively, were 2.7 (±1.3) and 1.23 (±0.59) µL/hr cm2, indicating that only ~50% of the water flux participated in the electroosmosis of mannitol. The passive permeability of water and mannitol after 10 hr of iontophoresis was, respectively, 6 and 30 times greater than the pretreatment values. At pH 7, the cationic permselectivity of HMS was marginal [the Na+ transport number ( $$t_{Na} + $$ ) was determined to be 0.46] and less than that reported for human skin. Lowering the pH values of the solutions on either side of the skin to slightly less than 4 reversed the direction of net volume flow; cathodal flux was greater than anodal flux. When the donor solution was at pH 3.8 and the receptor was pH 7.4, the flux profile was complicated and net volume flow was not obvious. Finally, it was found that electroosmosis from anode to cathode was retained even following removal of the stratum corneum by tape-stripping.
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