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Dive into the research topics where Ana Paula Serro is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana Paula Serro.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research | 1999

Hydrophobicity, surface tension, and zeta potential measurements of glass-reinforced hydroxyapatite composites.

Maria A. Lopes; F.J. Monteiro; José D. Santos; Ana Paula Serro; Benilde Saramago

Wettability and zeta potential studies were performed to characterize the hydrophobicity, surface tension, and surface charge of P2O5-glass-reinforced hydroxyapatite composites. Quantitative phase analysis was performed by the Rietveld method using GSAS software applied to X-ray diffractograms. Surface charge was assessed by zeta potential measurements. Protein adsorption studies were performed using vitronectin. Contact angles and surface tensions variation with time were determined by the sessile and pendent drop techniques, respectively, using ADSA-P software. The highest (-18.1 mV) and lowest (-28.7 mV) values of zeta potential were found for hydroxyapatite (HA) and beta-tricalcium phosphate (beta-TCP), respectively, with composite materials presenting values in between. All studied bioceramic materials showed similar solid surface tension. For HA and beta-TCP, solid surface tensions of 46.7 and 45.3 mJ/m2, respectively, were obtained, while composites presented intermediate surface tension values. The dispersive component of surface tension was the predominant one for all materials studied. Adhesion work values between the vitronectin solution and HA and beta-TCP were found to be 79.8 and 88.0 mJ/m2, respectively, while the 4.0 wt % glass composites showed slightly lower values than the 2.5 wt % ones. The presence of beta-TCP influenced surface charge, hydrophobicity, and protein adsorption of the glass-reinforced HA composites, and therefore indirectly affected cell-biomaterial interactions.


Biomaterials | 1997

Apatite deposition on titanium surfaces — the role of albumin adsorption

Ana Paula Serro; Anabela C. Fernandes; Benilde Saramago; J. Lima; Mário A. Barbosa

Titanium implant surfaces are known to spontaneously nucleate apatite layers when in contact with simulated body fluids. However, adsorption of proteins may influence the process of apatite layer formation. In this study the role of bovine serum albumin (BSA) adsorption in the process of apatite deposition on titanium substrates is investigated. Deposition of calcium phosphate was induced by immersing titanium substrates in a Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) for times ranging from 1 to 23 days. The resulting substrates were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), wettability measurements and electrochemical impedance determinations. All these methods indicate the presence of a calcium phosphate layer. The same procedure was repeated substituting HBSS with a solution of BSA in HBSS. Although SEM, EDS and electrochemical impedance spectra do not reveal the presence of an apatite layer, XPS analysis strongly indicates that the inhibition of apatite formation by BSA is only partial. The competition between BSA adsorption and apatite deposition seems to lead to a mixed film where the protein co-exists with calcium phosphate. Wettability studies suggest that this surface film is heterogeneous and porous, similar to the thicker films formed in albumin-free HBSS.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2010

Adsorption of albumin and sodium hyaluronate on UHMWPE: a QCM-D and AFM study.

Ana Paula Serro; K. Degiampietro; R. Colaço; Benilde Saramago

The biotribological properties of artificial joints, in particular the efficiency of the lubrication, strongly determine their lifetime. The most commonly used artificial joints combine a metallic or ceramic part articulating against a ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) counterface, and are lubricated by the periprosthetic fluid. This fluid contains several macromolecules, namely albumin and sodium hyaluronate (NaHA), that are known to be involved in the lubrication process. There are several studies in the literature concerning the interaction of the referred macromolecules with ceramic or metallic prosthetic materials. However, to our knowledge, information about their binding to the polymeric surface is practically inexistent. The objective of this work is to contribute to clarify the role played by albumin and NaHA on the biolubrication process, through the investigation of their interaction with the UHMWPE surface. The study involves adsorption measurements using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D), the characterization of the adsorbed films by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and wettability determinations. Albumin was found to adsorb strongly and extensively to the polymer, while NaHA led to a very low adsorption. In both cases rigid films were obtained, but with different morphology and porosity. The high binding affinity of the protein to the polymer was demonstrated both by the results of the fittings to Langmuir and Freundlich models and by the values of the adhesion forces determined by AFM. In the simultaneous adsorption of albumin and NaHA, protein adsorption is predominant and determines the surface properties.


Biomaterials | 2001

Effect of chemical composition on hydrophobicity and zeta potential of plasma sprayed HA/CaO-P2O5 glass coatings.

M.P. Ferraz; F.J. Monteiro; Ana Paula Serro; Benilde Saramago; Iain Ronald Gibson; José D. Santos

Multilayered plasma sprayed coatings on the surface of Ti-6Al-4V alloys have been prepared, which were composed of an underlayer of HA and a surface layer of a CaO-P2O5 glass-HA composite, with 2 or 4wt% of glass. Contact angle and surface tension variation with time, for both water and a protein solution, were determined by the sessile and pendent drop methods respectively using the ADSA-P software. Wettability studies showed that hydrophobicity of the coatings increase with the glass addition. The work of adhesion of albumin was also altered in a controlled manner by the addition of the CaO-P2O5 glass, being lower on the composite coatings than on HA. Zeta potential (ZP) results showed that composite coatings presented a higher net negative charge than HA coatings and that ZP values were also influenced by the content of the glass. This study demonstrated that the surface properties of those coatings may be modified by the addition of CaO-P2O5 glass.


Biomaterials | 2003

Mineralisation of two phosphate ceramics in HBSS: role of albumin

Paula A. A. P. Marques; Ana Paula Serro; Benilde Saramago; Anabela C. Fernandes; M.C.F. Magalhães; Rui N. Correia

The role of albumin in the mineralisation process of commercial hydroxyapatite (HAp) and synthesised biphasic (HAp-tricalcium phosphate) ceramics in a bufferless simulated inorganic plasma (HBSS) was investigated by conventional in vitro tests and static and dynamic wettability measurements. Albumin was either pre-adsorbed or solubilised in HBSS. It was found that calcium complexation by albumin plays a key role in early mineralisation kinetics, so that mineralisation is favoured when albumin is pre-adsorbed and hindered when it is dissolved in HBSS. In the biphasic ceramic this picture is complicated by the fact that albumin, in solution, seems to promote the dissolution of tricalcium phosphate, and simultaneously compete for calcium with the ceramic. It also appears that albumin has a stabilising effect of octacalcium phosphate present in deposits on commercial HAp. The same effect may be present in the case of the biphasic ceramic, at earlier mineralisation times, when octacalcium phosphate appears as a precursor of HAp. Octacalcium phosphate formation on commercial apatite is accompanied by carbonate substitution in phosphate positions.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2014

Comparison of two hydrogel formulations for drug release in ophthalmic lenses.

Patrizia Paradiso; Raquel Galante; Luís F. Santos; A.P. Alves de Matos; R. Colaço; Ana Paula Serro; Benilde Saramago

In the present work two types of polymers were investigated as drug releasing contact lens materials: a poly-hydroxyethylmethacrylate (pHEMA) based hydrogel and a silicone hydrogel. The silicone hydrogel resulted from the addition of TRIS, a hydrophobic monomer containing silicon (3-tris(trimethylsilyloxy)silylpropyl 2-methylprop-2-enoate), to pHEMA. Both hydrogels were loaded with an antibiotic (levofloxacin) and an antiseptic (chlorhexidine) by soaking in the drug solutions. The hydrogel properties were determined to be within the range demanded for lens materials. The release profiles of both drugs from the hydrogels were obtained and eventual drug/polymer interactions were assessed with the help of Raman spectra. A mathematical model, developed to mimic the eye conditions, was applied to the experimental results in order to predict the in vivo efficacy of the studied systems. The release profiles were compared with those resulting from the application of commercial eyedrops. The pHEMA based hydrogel demonstrated to be the best material to achieve a controlled release of levofloxacin. In the case of chlorhexidine, the silicone hydrogel seems to lead to better results. In both cases, our results suggest that these materials are adequate for the preparation of daily disposable therapeutic contact lenses.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Effects of ionic surfactants used in reversed micelles on cutinase activity and stability

Ana Goncalves; Ana Paula Serro; M.R. Aires-Barros; J. M. S. Cabral

The effects of aqueous surfactant solutions on the kinetics and stability of cutinase from Fusarium solani pisi were studied. The surfactant sodium bis[2-ethylhexyl]ester sulfosuccinic acid (AOT) acts as a pseudo-competitive inhibitor within a limited concentration range relative to the hydrolysis of short-chain p-nitrophenyl esters. For higher concentrations a hyperbolic mixed inhibition takes place. A pseudo-activation of hydrolysis in presence of AOT and hexadecyltrimethyl-ammonium bromide (CTAB) was observed. CTAB has similar effects on kinetics of cutinase. Cutinase revealed to be stable in CTAB solutions, with activity retention as high as 80%. AOT has a deleterious effect on the enzyme in the time course, resulting in acute loss of activity possibly related with unfolding of the protein structure. A relation between deactivation rate constants and AOT/cutinase concentration ratios is suggested. The presence of the linear alcohol, 1-hexanol, was included in these solutions, in the attempt to interpret the deactivation of cutinase when encapsulated in reversed micelle systems in the absence of this co-surfactant.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 1997

THE INFLUENCE OF PROTEINS ON CALCIUM PHOSPHATE DEPOSITION OVER TITANIUM IMPLANTS STUDIED BY DYNAMIC CONTACT ANGLE ANALYSIS AND XPS

Ana Paula Serro; Anabela C. Fernandes; Benilde de Jesus

Abstract The spontaneous formation of a calcium phosphate (apatite-like) layer on the surface of titanium implants in contact with biological model fluids is well known, but the effect of the presence of proteins in real biological fluids is not yet well understood. In this work, the process of calcium phosphate deposition on titanimn surfaces immersed in Hanks balanced salt solution (HBSS) containing dissolved bovine serum albumin (BSA) was studied by dynamic contact angle analysis (DCA) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Previous studies using electrochemical and wettability techniques as well as scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and XPS showed that although the deposition of calcium and phosphate ions still occurs in the presence of albumin, the growth of a calcium phosphate layer is inhibited. The present study suggests that when the Ti sample contacts a solution where both protein molecules and calcium and phosphate ions are present, the protein adsorbs first followed by the deposition of the ions. The same behaviour was observed for Ti substrates pre-covered by an apatite-like layer. Ti samples previously coated with a protein film, obtained by incubation in an isotonic saline solution of albumin, were studied after immersion in HBSS. In this case only XPS was able to detect traces of calcium and phosphate ions in the surface layer which were invisible to the DCA analysis.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2008

Adhesion forces in liquid media: Effect of surface topography and wettability

Ana Paula Serro; R. Colaço; Benilde Saramago

This work was motivated by the unexpected values of adhesion forces measured between an atomic force microscopy tip and the hydrophobic surface of ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene. Two types of samples with different roughness but similar wettability were tested. Adhesion forces of similar magnitude were obtained in air and in polar liquids (water and Hanks Balanced Salt Solution, a saline solution) with the rougher sample. In contrast, the adhesion forces measured on the smoother sample in air were much higher than those measured in water or in the aqueous solution. Those experimental results suggested the presence of nanobubbles at the interface between the rough sample and the polar liquids. The existence of the nanobubbles was further confirmed by the images of the interface obtained in noncontact tapping mode. The adhesion forces measured in a nonpolar liquid (hexadecane) were small and of the same order of magnitude for both samples and their values were in good agreement with the predictions of the London-Hamaker approach for the van der Waals interactions. Finally, we correlate the appearance of nanobubbles with surface topography. The conclusion of this work is that adhesion forces measured in aqueous media may be strongly affected by the presence of nanobubbles if the surface presents topographical accidents.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2016

Chitosan/alginate based multilayers to control drug release from ophthalmic lens.

Diana Silva; Luís F.V. Pinto; Dimitriya Bozukova; Luís F. Santos; Ana Paula Serro; Benilde Saramago

In this study we investigated the possibility of using layer-by-layer deposition, based in natural polymers (chitosan and alginate), to control the release of different ophthalmic drugs from three types of lens materials: a silicone-based hydrogel recently proposed by our group as drug releasing soft contact lens (SCL) material and two commercially available materials: CI26Y for intraocular lens (IOLs) and Definitive 50 for SCLs. The optimised coating, consisting in one double layer of (alginate - CaCl2)/(chitosan+glyoxal) topped with a final alginate-CaCl2 layer to avoid chitosan degradation by tear fluid proteins, proved to have excellent features to control the release of the anti-inflammatory, diclofenac, while keeping or improving the physical properties of the lenses. The coating leads to a controlled release of diclofenac from SCL and IOL materials for, at least, one week. Due to its high hydrophilicity (water contact angle≈0) and biocompatibility, it should avoid the use of further surface treatments to enhance the useŕs comfort. However, the barrier effect of this coating is specific for diclofenac, giving evidence to the need of optimizing the chemical composition of the layers in view of the desired drug.

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Benilde Saramago

Instituto Superior Técnico

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R. Colaço

Instituto Superior Técnico

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Patrizia Paradiso

Instituto Superior Técnico

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Raquel Galante

Instituto Superior Técnico

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M.P. Gispert

Instituto Superior Técnico

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C.G. Figueiredo-Pina

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Luís F. Santos

Instituto Superior Técnico

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