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Lulu Pang

Researcher at Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Publications -  13
Citations -  147

Lulu Pang is an academic researcher from Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tetrandrine & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 11 publications receiving 43 citations.

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Electroporation-enhanced transdermal drug delivery: Effects of logP, pKa, solubility and penetration time.

TL;DR: Electroporation had great influences on the structure of stratum corneum to improve the cumulative permeability due to the formation of pores maintaining for at least 2 h, depending on the power and time, and then the permeation gradually recovered to the normal value after 12 h.
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ICG-loaded photodynamic chitosan/polyvinyl alcohol composite nanofibers: Anti-resistant bacterial effect and improved healing of infected wounds.

TL;DR: The photodynamic nanofibers could inhibit the bacteria and decreased the F4/80 expression of MRSA-infected rats, and provide a novel promising option for treatment of infected wound.
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Comparative study of oral and intranasal puerarin for prevention of brain injury induced by acute high-altitude hypoxia.

TL;DR: Puerarin TISGs are an effective neuroprotector formulation for prevention of brain injury induced by acute high-altitude hypoxia and led to excellent brain targeting effect in rat models of hypobarism/hypoxia-induced brain injury.
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Nasal timosaponin BII dually sensitive in situ hydrogels for the prevention of Alzheimer's disease induced by lipopolysaccharides.

TL;DR: The nasal timosaponin BII dually sensitive ISGs can serve as a promising medication for local prevention of AD and the spatial memory and spontaneous behavior were improved after treatment compared to the model.
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Intranasal temperature-sensitive hydrogels of cannabidiol inclusion complex for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder.

TL;DR: Intranasal administration of CBD TSGs was more efficient and had more obvious brain targeting effects than oral administration, as evidenced by the pharmacokinetics and brain tissue distribution of cannabidiol inclusion complex temperature-sensitive hydrogels.