Development of polylactic acid microneedles for enhanced transdermal delivery of desmopressin peptides: A computational study.

Dashti, Amirhossein et al.·Journal of pharmaceutical sciences·2025·
RPEP-106242025RETHINKTHC RESEARCH DATABASErethinkthc.com/research

Quick Facts

Study Type
Not classified
Evidence
Not graded
Sample
Not reported

What This Study Found

Key Numbers

How They Did This

Why This Research Matters

What This Study Doesn't Tell Us

Trust & Context

Original Title:
Development of polylactic acid microneedles for enhanced transdermal delivery of desmopressin peptides: A computational study.
Published In:
Journal of pharmaceutical sciences, 114(6), 103777 (2025)
Database ID:
RPEP-10624

Evidence Hierarchy

Meta-Analysis / Systematic Review
Randomized Controlled Trial
Cohort / Case-Control
Cross-Sectional / ObservationalSnapshot without intervening
This study
Case Report / Animal Study
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Cite This Study

RPEP-10624·https://rethinkpeptides.com/research/RPEP-10624

APA

Dashti, Amirhossein; Salimibani, Milad; Fanaei, Yegane. (2025). Development of polylactic acid microneedles for enhanced transdermal delivery of desmopressin peptides: A computational study.. Journal of pharmaceutical sciences, 114(6), 103777. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2025.103777

MLA

Dashti, Amirhossein, et al. "Development of polylactic acid microneedles for enhanced transdermal delivery of desmopressin peptides: A computational study.." Journal of pharmaceutical sciences, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2025.103777

RethinkPeptides

RethinkPeptides Research Database. "Development of polylactic acid microneedles for enhanced tra..." RPEP-10624. Retrieved from https://rethinkpeptides.com/research/dashti-2025-development-of-polylactic-acid

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Study data sourced from PubMed, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.

This study breakdown was produced by the RethinkPeptides research team. We analyze and report published research findings without making health recommendations. All interpretations are based solely on the published abstract and study data.