RESUMO
The aim of the present study was to design and evaluate the suppositories of aceclofenac a non-steroidal anti inflammatory drug (NSAID). Aceclofenac, rectal suppositories were developed by employing various hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymeric bases like gelatin, PEG-400 and hydrogenated vegetable oil using propylene glycol as plasticizer and beeswax as hardening agent. The in-vitro release rate data was evaluated statistically and was found that from all the formulations the drug release is by diffusion mechanism (r = 0.9547 to 0.9967) according to Higuchi’s equation. All the prepared formulations have shown zero-order release kinetics except those prepared by utilizing 15% and 20 % of PEG-400. The formulation prepared using 7.5% beeswax in hydrogenated vegetable oil has dis-played zero-order drug release (r = 0.9927) and has released 99.18% of the aceclofenac within 4h, hence, this formulation is considered as a promising formulation. The stability study on the promising formulation was con-ducted over a period of 6 months and found that there are no significant changes in the drug content and in-vitro drug release rate (p<0.05). The result suggests that the suppositories can be prepared by employing hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymers.
RESUMO
The aim of the present study was to design and evaluate the suppositories of aceclofenac a non-steroidal anti inflammatory drug (NSAID). Aceclofenac, rectal suppositories were developed by employing various hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymeric bases like gelatin, PEG-400 and hydrogenated vegetable oil using propylene glycol as plasticizer and beeswax as hardening agent. The in-vitro release rate data was evaluated statistically and was found that from all the formulations the drug release is by diffusion mechanism (r = 0.9547 to 0.9967) according to Higuchi’s equation. All the prepared formulations have shown zero-order release kinetics except those prepared by utilizing 15% and 20 % of PEG-400. The formulation prepared using 7.5% beeswax in hydrogenated vegetable oil has dis-played zero-order drug release (r = 0.9927) and has released 99.18% of the aceclofenac within 4h, hence, this formulation is considered as a promising formulation. The stability study on the promising formulation was con-ducted over a period of 6 months and found that there are no significant changes in the drug content and in-vitro drug release rate (p<0.05). The result suggests that the suppositories can be prepared by employing hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymers.