DYNAMICS OF SILVER NANOPARTICLES IN HUMAN SKIN IN VIVO STUDIED BY SYNCHROTRON RADIATION AND ICP-MS
Conference Poster
Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
The topical application of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) is increasingly used in the
treatment of burns to prevent infections and favour the regeneration of the tissue.
We have shown that AgNPs can penetrate into the dermis, are taken up by the
fibroblasts and interact with mitochondria,1-3 but no data are currently available on
their subsequent chemical transformations, which are key processes to determine
their potential toxicity.
Here, we present the first high resolution spatial and temporal data on silver
distribution and speciation in depth profiles of burned skin after application of
AgNPs. Full-profile biopsies of the wound were collected from a patient before
treatment, and then at 3-days intervals up to the complete healing. Elemental
imaging maps and speciation were obtained using synchrotron radiation ?XRF
and ?XANES on selected slices from each biopsy, and allowed to elucidate the
chemical transformations and penetration of AgNPs into the tissue. The potential
of AgNPs to reach the systemic circulation was investigated by developing a new
analytical method for the simultaneous determination of dissolved Ag and
characterization of AgNPs in human blood, based on hydrodynamic
chromatography hyphenated to single-particle ICP-MS, and combined with a new
ad-hoc algorithm for data treatment. Within a single analytical run, the method
provides the deconvoluted chromatogram and concentration of dissolved Ag
species, and the multidimensional distribution of AgNPs in terms of
hydrodynamic diameter, mass-derived diameter, size-dependent number and mass
concentrations, total number and mass concentration. The method was applied to
study the dynamics of AgNPs in human plasma in vitro, and to investigate the
presence of AgNPs in the blood of three burnt patients.
Iris type:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
silver; synchrotron; burns
List of contributors: