https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ci994-tacedinaline.html The monitoring of degradation processes' kinetics in polymers is one of the attractive possibilities of ultrasound technique applications that provide non-destructive imaging of polymers' internal microstructure and measurements of elastic properties. In this work, biodegradable polymers and copolymers based on L,L-lactide, D,L-lactide and ε-caprolactone have been studied at different stages of hydrolysis at 37 °C by high-frequency (100 and 200 MHz) ultrasound. The acoustic microscopy technique has been developed to reveal changes in the internal microstructure and bulk sound speed in polymer samples over a hydrolysis period of 25 weeks. Ultrasound imaging provides visualization of amorphous and crystalline phases, internal imperfections, variation in packing density, and other microstructural features. Acoustic images demonstrate nucleation, growth, and the changes in internal inhomogeneities in polymers during degradation accompanied by a decrease in the polymers' molecular weight. We associate the changes ocess as well as improvement of elastic properties of the poly(ε -caprolactone) and poly(L-lactide-co-caprolactone) during hydrothermal aging. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) therapy has achieved remarkable clinical efficacy against hematological cancers and has been approved by FDA for treatment of B-cell tumors. However, the complex manufacturing process and limited success in solid tumors hamper its widespread applications, thus prompting the development of new strategies for overcoming the abovementioned hurdles. In the last decade, nanotechnology has provided sustainable strategies for improving cancer immunotherapy through vaccine development and delivery of immunomodulatory drugs. Nanotechnology can boost CAR-T therapy and may overcome the existing challenges by emerging as a carrier for CAR-T therapy or in combination with CAR-T, it may inhibit solid tumors more effectively than conventional ap