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1.
Entropy (Basel) ; 24(4)2022 Mar 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35455147

RESUMO

Possible implications and consequences of using SL(2R) as invariance groups in the description at any scale resolution of the dynamics of any complex system are analyzed. From this perspective and based on Jaynes' remark (any circumstance left unspecified in the description of any complex system dynamics has the concrete expression in the existence of an invariance group), in the present paper one specifies such unspecified circumstances that result directly from the consideration of the canonical formalism induced by the SL(2R) as invariance group. It follows that both the Hamiltonian function and the Guassian distribution acquire the status of invariant group functions, the parameters that define the Hamiltonian acquire statistical significances based on a principle of maximizing informational energy, the class of statistical hypotheses specific to Gaussians of the same average acts as transitivity manifolds of the group (transitivity manifolds which can be correlated with the multifractal-non-multifractal scale transitions), joint invariant functions induced through SL(2R) groups isomorphism (the SL(2R) variables group, and the SL(2R) parameters group, etc.). For an ensemble of oscillators of the same frequency, the unspecified circumstances return to the ignorance of the amplitude and phase of each of the oscillators, which forces the recourse to a statistical ensemble traversed by the transformations of the Barbilian-type group. Finally, the model is validated based on numerical simulations and experimental results that refer to transient phenomena in ablation plasmas. The novelty of our model resides in the fact that fractalization through stochasticization is imposed through group invariance, situation in which the group's transitivity manifolds can be correlated with the scale resolution.

2.
Entropy (Basel) ; 23(4)2021 Apr 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33918896

RESUMO

By assimilating biological systems, both structural and functional, into multifractal objects, their behavior can be described in the framework of the scale relativity theory, in any of its forms (standard form in Nottale's sense and/or the form of the multifractal theory of motion). By operating in the context of the multifractal theory of motion, based on multifractalization through non-Markovian stochastic processes, the main results of Nottale's theory can be generalized (specific momentum conservation laws, both at differentiable and non-differentiable resolution scales, specific momentum conservation law associated with the differentiable-non-differentiable scale transition, etc.). In such a context, all results are explicated through analyzing biological processes, such as acute arterial occlusions as scale transitions. Thus, we show through a biophysical multifractal model that the blocking of the lumen of a healthy artery can happen as a result of the "stopping effect" associated with the differentiable-non-differentiable scale transition. We consider that blood entities move on continuous but non-differentiable (multifractal) curves. We determine the biophysical parameters that characterize the blood flow as a Bingham-type rheological fluid through a normal arterial structure assimilated with a horizontal "pipe" with circular symmetry. Our model has been validated based on experimental clinical data.

3.
Drug Deliv ; 28(1): 261-271, 2021 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33501878

RESUMO

Controlled drug delivery systems are of utmost importance for the improvement of drug bioavailability while limiting the side effects. For the improvement of their performances, drug release modeling is a significant tool for the further optimization of the drug delivery systems to cross the barrier to practical application. We report here on the modeling of the diclofenac sodium salt (DCF) release from a hydrogel matrix based on PEGylated chitosan in the context of Multifractal Theory of Motion, by means of a fundamental spinor set given by 2 × 2 matrices with real elements, which can describe the drug-release dynamics at global and local scales. The drug delivery systems were prepared by in situ hydrogenation of PEGylated chitosan with citral in the presence of the DCF, by varying the hydrophilic/hydrophobic ratio of the components. They demonstrated a good dispersion of the drug into the matrix by forming matrix-drug entities which enabled a prolonged drug delivery behavior correlated with the hydrophilicity degree of the matrix. The application of the Multifractal Theory of Motion fitted very well on these findings, the fractality degree accurately describing the changes in hydrophilicity of the polymer. The validation of the model on this series of formulations encourages its further use for other systems, as an easy tool for estimating the drug release toward the design improvement. The present paper is a continuation of the work 'A theoretical mathematical model for assessing diclofenac release from chitosan-based formulations,' published in Drug Delivery Journal, 27(1), 2020, that focused on the consequences induced by the invariance groups of Multifractal Diffusion Equations in correlation with the drug release dynamics.


Assuntos
Quitosana , Diclofenaco/farmacocinética , Liberação Controlada de Fármacos , Hidrogéis , Modelos Teóricos , Polietilenoglicóis , Monoterpenos Acíclicos , Diclofenaco/administração & dosagem , Sistemas de Liberação de Medicamentos , Hidrogenação , Modelos Químicos
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