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Manuel Arruebo

Researcher at University of Zaragoza

Publications -  177
Citations -  8672

Manuel Arruebo is an academic researcher from University of Zaragoza. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanoparticle & Drug delivery. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 157 publications receiving 6882 citations. Previous affiliations of Manuel Arruebo include Hong Kong University of Science and Technology & Spanish National Research Council.

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Magnetic nanoparticles for drug delivery

TL;DR: The problems and recent advances in the development of magnetic NPs for drug delivery are reviewed, focusing particularly on the materials involved.
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Assessment of the evolution of cancer treatment therapies.

TL;DR: A review of the evolution of cancer treatments, starting with chemotherapy, surgery, radiation and immunotherapy, and moving on to the most promising cutting-edge therapies (gene therapy and nanomedicine).
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Antibody-conjugated nanoparticles for biomedical applications

TL;DR: This review of antibodies and nanoparticles is analysed, focusing especially on the recent developments for antibody-conjugated nanoparticles, offering the researcher an overview of the different applications and possibilities of these hybrid carriers.
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Development of Noncytotoxic Chitosan–Gold Nanocomposites as Efficient Antibacterial Materials

TL;DR: Three different chitosan grades varying in the average molecular weight and deacetylation degree were used and the resulting nanocomposites did not show any cytotoxicity against mammalian somatic and tumoral cells, making them potentially applicable as antimicrobial coatings in the biomedical field.
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Development of Magnetic Nanostructured Silica-Based Materials as Potential Vectors for Drug-Delivery Applications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize metallic iron nanoparticles within micron-sized mesoporous molecular sieves and hollow silica microcapsules (pores of 2.7 and 15 nm) using several cycles of wet impregnation under vacuum, followed by drying, oxidation, and reduction steps.