Skip to main content
Article

Recent advancements of nanoparticles for antiviral therapy

Priyanku Pradip DasDepartment of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Shoolini University, Solan-173229, Himachal Pradesh, IndiaSounok SenguptaDepartment of Pharmacology, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Shoolini University, Solan-173229, Himachal Pradesh, IndiaDeepak BalramDepartment of Electrical Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 106, Taiwan ROCKuang‐Yow LianDepartment of Electrical Engineering, National Taipei University of Technology, Taipei 106, Taiwan ROCShavkatjon AzizovFaculty of Life Sciences, Pharmaceutical Technical University, Tashkent 100084, UzbekistanUjjwal NeogiNew Delhi Institute of Management, New Delhi-110062, IndiaSadanand PandeyDepartment of Chemistry, College of Natural Sciences, Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan 38541, Republic of KoreaDeepak KumarDepartment of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Shoolini University, Solan-173229, Himachal Pradesh, India
ABI

Abstract

Abstract The global outbreak of infectious diseases in recent decades has caused serious health problems worldwide. Key factors that contribute to the lack of a complete therapeutic strategy against viral infections include biomimetic architecture, ability to manipulate the antibody, continuous antigen transfer, covert system of injecting inappropriate doses of drugs at target sites, resulting in drug resistance. Reasons include low water solubility, poor permeability, plasma protein a high self-similarity, short gene half-life, and rapid system elimination. To combat these challenges, nanoparticle-based drug delivery has emerged as a revolutionary approach, applying nanoengineering tools to nanoparticle synthesis to achieve optimal drug concentrations at targeted sites over time nanoparticles with nano dimensional structure enhanced permeability and retention effects, increasing surface area volume ratios, in surface-functioning capacity, prove effective in antiviral therapeutic delivery but size, shape, charge, and surface topology of nanoparticles allow target specific drug delivery, cellular uptake, opsonization by host immune cells, drug retention time, transcytosis, extended biological half -life, in vivo stability, and significantly affect cytotoxicity. This review provides an in-depth analysis of the critical role of nanotechnology-based drugs while addressing important aspects of clinical safety and efficacy.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Cited by 0167 references
Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon