76 research outputs found

    Formulation and evaluation of Theophylline controlled release matrix tablets using Guar gum.

    Get PDF
    Theophylline controlled release matrix tablets were prepared with guar gum in two ratios and with three different hardness of 5, 6 and 7kg/cm2. Theophylline controlled release granules were prepared and evaluated for the angle of repose, bulk density, tapped density, compressibility index and hausners ratio. All the formulation showed good flow properties. The compressed tablets were evaluated for the hardness, uniformity of weight, friability, drug content and invitro dissolution studies. All the formulations showed compliance with pharmacopial standards. There was no interaction between drug, polymer and other excipients. It was confirmed by FTIR studies. Among all the formulations F6 (i.e. polymer ratio1:2 and hardness 7kg/cm2) showed prolong release when compare to other formulations. The drug release kinetics showed zero order. The optimum formulation (F6) was stable when it was stored at 40 + 20 C, 280 + 20 C and at 450 + 20 C for 6 months

    IN VITRO ANTI-INFLAMMATORY AND ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITIES OF HINGULESWARA RASABASED HERBOMINERAL FORMULATIONS

    Get PDF
    Objective: The aims of the present investigation were to develop the herbal and/or herbomineral formulations of Hinguleswara rasa and to compare their anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities, in vitro, with that of standard drug samples.Methods: This study was an interventional investigation in three samples: In the first sample, Hinguleswara rasa (HR1) was prepared as per methodology described in Rasatarangini using Shuddha Hingula (10 g), Shuddha Vatsanabha (10 g), and Pippali (10 g). In the second and third sample, respectively, Hinguleswara rasa was prepared by replacing Shuddha Hingula with Kajjali where Kajjali made from Hingulotha parada and Sodhita parada constitutes two varieties of Hinguleswara rasa, i.e. HR2 and HR3. In vitro antioxidant activity was studied using 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl, and the absorbance was recorded at 517 nm. For evaluating the in vitro anti-inflammatory studies, the inhibition of albumin denaturation technique was performed.Results: The results showed that the formulation of Hinguleswara rasa has shown dose-dependent activity which was observed in 100 μg concentration. HR1, HR2, and HR3 showed 36.11, 17.22, and 16.11% radical scavenging activity.Conclusion: It could be concluded that the changes made in the formulations did not affect the in vitro anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects of the herbomineral formulations

    Influence of the calcium concentration in the presence of organic phosphorus on the physicochemical compatibility and stability of all-in-one admixtures for neonatal use

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Preterm infants need high amounts of calcium and phosphorus for bone mineralization, which is difficult to obtain with parenteral feeding due to the low solubility of these salts. The objective of this study was to evaluate the physicochemical compatibility of high concentrations of calcium associated with organic phosphate and its influence on the stability of AIO admixtures for neonatal use.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Three TPN admixture formulas were prepared in multilayered bags. The calcium content of the admixtures was adjusted to 0, 46.5 or 93 mg/100 ml in the presence of a fixed organic phosphate concentration as well as lipids, amino acids, inorganic salts, glucose, vitamins and oligoelements at pH 5.5. Each admixture was stored at 4°C, 25°C or 37°C and evaluated over a period of 7 days. The physicochemical stability parameters evaluated were visual aspect, pH, sterility, osmolality, peroxide formation, precipitation, and the size of lipid globules.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Color alterations occurred from the first day on, and reversible lipid film formation from the third day of study for the admixtures stored at 25°C and 37°C. According to the parameters evaluated, the admixtures were stable at 4°C; and none of them presented precipitated particles due to calcium/phosphate incompatibility or lipid globules larger than 5 μm, which is the main parameter currently used to evaluate lipid emulsion stability. The admixtures maintained low peroxide levels and osmolarity was appropriate for parenteral administration.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The total calcium and calcium/phosphorus ratios studied appeared not to influence the physicochemical compatibility and stability of AIO admixtures.</p

    Encapsulation of 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol with tetraethyl orthosilicate for CO2 capture

    Get PDF
    Carbon capture is widely recognised as an essential strategy to meet global goals for climate protection. Although various CO2 capture technologies including absorption, adsorption and membrane exist, they are not yet mature for post-combustion power plants mainly due to high energy penalty. Hence researchers are concentrating on developing non-aqueous solvents like ionic liquids, CO2-binding organic liquids, nanoparticle hybrid materials and microencapsulated sorbents to minimize the energy consumption for carbon capture. This research aims to develop a novel and efficient approach by encapsulating sorbents to capture CO2 in a cold environment. The conventional emulsion technique was selected for the microcapsule formulation by using 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol (AMP) as the core sorbent and silicon dioxide (SiO2) as the shell. This paper reports the findings on the formulated microcapsules including key formulation parameters, microstructure, size distribution and thermal cycling stability. Furthermore, the effects of microcapsule quality and absorption temperature on the CO2 loading capacity of the microcapsules were investigated using a self-developed pressure decay method. The preliminary results have shown that the AMP microcapsules are promising to replace conventional sorbents.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    Review on AC-AC Converter Based Dynamic Voltage Restorer

    No full text
    The maintain power quality is one of the major part of all kind of industry as well as power systems. Voltage sag and voltage swell the common power quality issue. The Dynamic Voltage Restorer is the common Device which is used to mitigate the above problems. In this paper provides review on various type of AC-AC converter based DVR. The use of AC-AC converter can compensate the voltage sag and swell without need of any kind of storage elements like capacitor and batteries. The absence of storage elements can reduce size and weight of the DVR. The feature various type of AC- AC converters based DVR is concentrated in this paper

    P A

    No full text
    Abstract: In this paper, we study the oscillatory behavior of the following neutral differential equation Sufficient conditions are obtained so that every every solution is either oscillatory or converges to zero. In particular. we extend the results obtained i

    Solution and stability of an n-dimensional functional equation

    No full text
    In this paper, we prove the general solution and generalized Hyers-Ulam stability of n-dimensional functional equations of the form where n is a fixed positive integer with N-{0, 1, 2, 3, 4}, in a Banach space via direct and fixed point methods. © 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

    Stability of a quartic functional equation

    No full text
    In this paper, the authors investigate the general solution and generalized Hyers–Ulam stability of the n-dimensional quartic functional equation of the form f(∑i=1nxi)=∑1≤i<j<k<l≤nf(xi+xj+xk+xl)+(-n+4)∑1≤i<j<k≤nf(xi+xj+xk)+(n2-7n+122)∑1=i;i≠jnf(xi+xj)-∑i=1nf(2xi)+(-n3+9n2-26n+1206)∑i=1n(f(xi)+f(-xi)2)where n is a positive integer with N- { 0 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 }. The stability of this quartic functional equation is introduced in Banach space using direct and fixed point methods. © 2018, Springer Nature Switzerland AG
    • …
    corecore