drug-delivery
Drug delivery encompasses the methods and technologies used to transport pharmaceutical compounds to specific target sites, optimizing therapeutic efficacy and safety. In plant science, this is particularly important because many plants naturally produce bioactive compounds with pharmaceutical properties, and drug delivery science helps researchers isolate, refine, and optimize these plant-derived compounds for medical use. Understanding drug delivery mechanisms directly supports the development of more effective plant-based therapeutics.
open_in_new WikipediaPlant-derived nanovesicles: the intelligent nanoplatforms for thera...
Vegetables, fruits, and herbs you grow or eat may be producing microscopic particles that activel...
Plant-derived extracellular vesicles for anti-obesity: Natural carr...
Fruits, vegetables, and herbs growing in your garden may contain microscopic particles that resea...
Plant exosomes as multifunctional platforms for metabolic targeting...
Plants you grow or eat — from ginger to grapes — produce microscopic particles that researchers a...
Plant-derived extracellular vesicles as a promising therapeutic and...
Plants you already eat — ginger, grapes, broccoli — quietly produce microscopic particles loaded ...
Unveiling the Potential of Plant-derived Exosomes: A Comprehensive Review.
Fruits, vegetables, and plants you eat every day naturally produce microscopic structures that sc...
Targeted alleviation of local inflammation by a hydroxypropyl-cyclo...
Mint in your garden and the wintergreen along your hiking trail produce compounds that scientists...
Intelligent plant exosomes synergize miRNAs and cisplatin for spati...
Medicinal plants you can grow at home are being harvested for their naturally occurring nanoparti...
Multi-modal therapeutic approaches to inflammatory bowel disease: p...
Plants in your kitchen and garden—herbs, spices, medicinal botanicals—are actively being studied ...