Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups

Objective: The nasal cavity effectively captures the particles present in inhaled air, thereby preventing harmful and toxic pollutants from reaching the lungs. This filtering ability of the nasal cavity can be effectively utilized for targeted nasal drug delivery applications. This study aims to und...

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Main Authors: Corda, John Valerian, Shenoy, B. Satish, Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin, Lewis, Leslie, Prakashini, K., Rao, Anoop, Zuber, Mohammad
Format: Article
Published: Taylor and Francis Ltd. 2024
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106265/
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08958378.2024.2312801
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.1062652024-05-12T11:06:38Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106265/ Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups Corda, John Valerian Shenoy, B. Satish Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin Lewis, Leslie Prakashini, K. Rao, Anoop Zuber, Mohammad Objective: The nasal cavity effectively captures the particles present in inhaled air, thereby preventing harmful and toxic pollutants from reaching the lungs. This filtering ability of the nasal cavity can be effectively utilized for targeted nasal drug delivery applications. This study aims to understand the particle deposition patterns in three age groups: neonate, infant, and adult. Materials and methods: The CT scans are built using MIMICS 21.0, followed by CATIA V6 to generate a patient-specific airway model. Fluid flow is simulated using ANSYS FLUENT 2021 R2. Spherical monodisperse microparticles ranging from 2 to 60 µm and a density of 1100 kg/m3 are simulated at steady-state and sedentary inspiration conditions. Results: The highest nasal valve depositions for the neonate are 25 for 20 µm, for infants, 10 for 50 µm, 15 for adults, and 15 for 15 µm. At mid nasal region, deposition of 15 for 20 µm is observed for infant and 8 for neonate and adult nasal cavities at a particle size of 10 and 20 µm, respectively. The highest particle deposition at the olfactory region is about 2.7 for the adult nasal cavity for 20 µm, and it is <1 for neonate and infant nasal cavities. Discussion and conclusions: The study of preferred nasal depositions during natural sedentary breathing conditions is utilized to determine the size that allows medication particles to be targeted to specific nose regions. Taylor and Francis Ltd. 2024-02 Article PeerReviewed Corda, John Valerian and Shenoy, B. Satish and Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin and Lewis, Leslie and Prakashini, K. and Rao, Anoop and Zuber, Mohammad (2024) Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups. Inhalation Toxicology, 36 (1). pp. 44-56. ISSN 0895-8378; ESSN: 1091-7691 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08958378.2024.2312801 10.1080/08958378.2024.2312801
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Objective: The nasal cavity effectively captures the particles present in inhaled air, thereby preventing harmful and toxic pollutants from reaching the lungs. This filtering ability of the nasal cavity can be effectively utilized for targeted nasal drug delivery applications. This study aims to understand the particle deposition patterns in three age groups: neonate, infant, and adult. Materials and methods: The CT scans are built using MIMICS 21.0, followed by CATIA V6 to generate a patient-specific airway model. Fluid flow is simulated using ANSYS FLUENT 2021 R2. Spherical monodisperse microparticles ranging from 2 to 60 µm and a density of 1100 kg/m3 are simulated at steady-state and sedentary inspiration conditions. Results: The highest nasal valve depositions for the neonate are 25 for 20 µm, for infants, 10 for 50 µm, 15 for adults, and 15 for 15 µm. At mid nasal region, deposition of 15 for 20 µm is observed for infant and 8 for neonate and adult nasal cavities at a particle size of 10 and 20 µm, respectively. The highest particle deposition at the olfactory region is about 2.7 for the adult nasal cavity for 20 µm, and it is <1 for neonate and infant nasal cavities. Discussion and conclusions: The study of preferred nasal depositions during natural sedentary breathing conditions is utilized to determine the size that allows medication particles to be targeted to specific nose regions.
format Article
author Corda, John Valerian
Shenoy, B. Satish
Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin
Lewis, Leslie
Prakashini, K.
Rao, Anoop
Zuber, Mohammad
spellingShingle Corda, John Valerian
Shenoy, B. Satish
Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin
Lewis, Leslie
Prakashini, K.
Rao, Anoop
Zuber, Mohammad
Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
author_facet Corda, John Valerian
Shenoy, B. Satish
Ahmad, Kamarul Arifin
Lewis, Leslie
Prakashini, K.
Rao, Anoop
Zuber, Mohammad
author_sort Corda, John Valerian
title Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
title_short Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
title_full Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
title_fullStr Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
title_sort comparison of microparticle transport and deposition in nasal cavity of three different age groups
publisher Taylor and Francis Ltd.
publishDate 2024
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/106265/
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08958378.2024.2312801
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