Author: Carvalho, Anna Paula A.; Conteâ€Junior, Carlos A.
Title: Recent Advances on Nanomaterials to COVIDâ€19 Management: A Systematic Review on Antiviral/Virucidal Agents and Mechanisms of SARSâ€CoVâ€2 Inhibition/Inactivation Cord-id: hx3jlsde Document date: 2021_2_22
ID: hx3jlsde
Snippet: The current pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) is recognized as a public health emergency of worldwide concern. Nanomaterials can be effectively used to detect, capture/inactivate or inhibit coronavirus cell entry/replication in the human host cell, preventing infection. Their potential for nanovaccines, immunoengineering, diagnosis, repurposing medication, and disinfectant surfaces targeting the novel coronavirus (SARSâ€CoVâ€2) is highlighted. In this systematic review the aim
Document: The current pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) is recognized as a public health emergency of worldwide concern. Nanomaterials can be effectively used to detect, capture/inactivate or inhibit coronavirus cell entry/replication in the human host cell, preventing infection. Their potential for nanovaccines, immunoengineering, diagnosis, repurposing medication, and disinfectant surfaces targeting the novel coronavirus (SARSâ€CoVâ€2) is highlighted. In this systematic review the aim is to present an unbiased view of which and how nanomaterials can reduce the spread of COVIDâ€19. Herein, the focus is on SARSâ€CoVâ€2, analyzing 46 articles retrieved before December 31, 2020. The interface between nanomaterials is described, and the main mechanisms to inhibit SARSâ€CoVâ€2 pathogenesis and viral inactivation are also discussed. Nanocarbons, biopolymeric, copper, and silver nanoparticles are potential antiviral and virucidal agents toward selfâ€cleaning and reusable filter media and surfaces (e.g., facial masks), drug administration, vaccines, and immunodiagnostic assays. Trends in toxicology research and safety tests can help fill the main gaps in the literature and overcome health surveillance's challenges. Phytochemicals delivery by nanocarriers also stand out as candidates to target and bioâ€friendly therapy. Nanocellulose might fill in the gaps. Future research using nanomaterials targeting novel therapies/prophylaxis measures to COVIDâ€19 and future outbreaks is discussed.
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