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1.
Int J Pharm ; 387(1-2): 48-55, 2010 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19969055

ABSTRACT

An alternative procedure for achieving formulation design in a high-shear wet granulation process has been developed. Particularly, a new formulation map has been proposed which describes the onset of a significant granule growth as a function of the formulation variables (diluent, dry and liquid binder). Granule growth has been monitored using on-line impeller torque and evaluated as changes in granule particle size distribution with respect to the dry formulation. It is shown how the onset of granule growth is denoted by an abrupt increase in the torque value requires the amount of binder liquid added to be greater than a certain threshold that is identified here as 'minimum liquid volume'. This minimum liquid volume is determined as a function of dry binder type, amount, hygroscopicity and particle size distribution of diluent. It is also demonstrated how this formulation map can be constructed from independent measurements of binder glass transition temperatures using a static humidity conditioning system.


Subject(s)
Excipients/chemistry , Technology, Pharmaceutical/methods , Chemistry, Pharmaceutical/methods , Humidity , Particle Size , Torque , Transition Temperature , Wettability
2.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 34(5): 833-46, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16708268

ABSTRACT

A versatile and automated image processing technique and data extraction procedure from videomicroscopic data is presented. The motivation is a detailed quantification of blood platelet adhesion from laminar flow onto a surface. The characteristics of the system under observation (type of cells, their speed of movement, and the quality of the optical image to analyze) provided the criteria for developing a new procedure enabling tracking for long image sequences. Specific features of the novel method include: automatic segmentation methodology which removes operator bias; platelet recognition across the series of images based on a probability density function (two-dimensional, Gaussian-like) tailored to the physics of platelet motion on the surface; options to automatically tune the procedure parameters to explore different applications; integrated analysis of the results (platelet trajectories) to obtain relevant information, such as deposition and removal rates, displacement distributions, pause times and rolling velocities. Synthetic images, providing known reference conditions, are used to test the method. The algorithm operation is illustrated by application to images obtained by fluorescence microscopy of the interaction between platelets and von Willebrand factor-coated surfaces in parallel-plate flow chambers. Potentials and limits are discussed, together with evaluation of errors resulting from an inaccurate tracking.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Blood Platelets/cytology , Blood Platelets/physiology , Flow Cytometry/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Microscopy, Video/methods , Platelet Adhesiveness/physiology , Animals , Blood Flow Velocity/physiology , Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Cell Movement/physiology , Cells, Cultured , Humans
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