Studies on self-nanoemulsifying drug delivery system of flurbiprofen employing long, medium and short chain triglycerides
Pakistan Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. 2017; 30 (2[Supp.]): 601-606
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| IMEMR
| ID: emr-186546
Bibliothèque responsable:
EMRO
The aim of the study was to successfully design, formulate and evaluate self-nanoemulsifying drug delivery system [SNEDDS] of poorly aqueous soluble drug viz. flurbiprofen using long [LCT], medium [MCT] and short chain triglycerides [SCT]. The SNEDDS are thermodynamically stable lipid based drug delivery systems which consist of mixture of oil, surfactant and co-surfactant. Upon aqueous dilution, this mixture produces nano-emulsion spontaneously on slight agitation. The excipients intended to be used were screened for their potential to dissolve the drug and to form clear dispersion upon aqueous dilution. Labrafil M 1944 CS, capryol-90 and triacetin were selected as long, medium and short chain triglycerides, respectively, as lipids while tween-80 and polyethylene glycol-400 [PEG-400]/ethanol [3:1 ratio] were selected as surfactant and co-surfactant, respectively. The excipients were studied at every possible combination ratios using pseudo-ternary diagram. The LCT, MCT and SCT-SNEDDS were optimized using thermodynamic studies, percentage transmittance value, viscosity, refractive index [RI], electrical conductivity, globule size analysis and in-vitro drug release studies. The drug release profiles of optimized SNEDDS were then compared with market product at different pH mediums. The LCT-SNEDDS was considered to be superior for enhancement of the drug bioavailability when compared with other SNEDDS formulations and market product
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Indice:
IMEMR
langue:
En
Texte intégral:
Pak. J. Pharm. Sci.
Année:
2017