15 research outputs found

    The Impact of Vehicles on the Mucoadhesive Properties of Orally Administrated Nanoparticles: a Case Study with Chitosan-4-Thiobutylamidine Conjugate

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    The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of various vehicles on mucoadhesive properties of thiolated chitosan nanoparticles both in vitro and in vivo. Nanoparticles (NPs) were prepared by in situ gelation technique followed by labeling with fluorescein diacetate. Comparative studies on mucoadhesion were done with these thiolated chitosan NPs and unmodified chitosan NPs (control). The obtained nanoparticles displayed a mean diameter of 164.2 ± 6.9 nm and a zeta potential of 21.5 ± 5 mV. In an in vitro adhesion study, unhydrated thiolated NPs adhered strongly to freshly excised porcine small intestine, which was more than threefold increase compared to the control. In contrast, in the presence of various vehicles (PEG 300, miglyol 840, PEG 6000, cremophor EL, and caprylic triglyceride), the mucoadhesive properties of thiolated NPs were comparatively weak. Thiolated NPs suspended in caprylic triglyceride, for example, had a percent mucoadhesion of 22.50 ± 5.35% on the mucosa. Furthermore, results from in vivo mucoadhesion studies revealed that the dry form of nanoparticles exhibits the strongest mucoadhesion, followed by nanoparticles suspended in PEG 300, miglyol, and 100 mM phosphate buffer, in that order. Three hours after administration, the gastrointestinal residence time of the dry form of thiolated NPs was up to 3.6-fold prolonged. These findings should contribute to the design of highly effective oral mucoadhesive nanoparticulate drug delivery systems

    Mucoadhesive Microspheres for Gastroretentive Delivery of Acyclovir: In Vitro and In Vivo Evaluation

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    The aim of the present investigation was to evaluate the potential use of mucoadhesive microspheres for gastroretentive delivery of acyclovir. Chitosan, thiolated chitosan, Carbopol 71G and Methocel K15M were used as mucoadhesive polymers. Microsphere formulations were prepared using emulsion-chemical crosslinking technique and evaluated in vitro, ex-vivo and in-vivo. Gelatin capsules containing drug powder showed complete dissolution (90.5 ± 3.6%) in 1 h. The release of drug was prolonged to 12 h (78.8 ± 3.9) when incorporated into mucoadhesive microspheres. The poor bioavailability of acyclovir is attributed to short retention of its dosage form at the absorption sites (in upper gastrointestinal tract to duodenum and jejunum). The results of mucoadhesion study showed better retention of thiolated chitosan microspheres (8.0 ± 0.8 h) in duodenal and jejunum regions of intestine. The results of qualitative and quantitative GI distribution study also showed significant higher retention of mucoadhesive microspheres in upper GI tract. Pharmacokinetic study revealed that administration of mucoadhesive microspheres could maintain measurable plasma concentration of acyclovir through 24 h, as compared to 5 h after its administration in solution form. Thiolated chitosan microsphere showed superiority over the other formulations as observed with nearly 4.0-fold higher AUC0–24 value (1,090 ± 51 ng h/ml) in comparison to drug solution (281 ± 28 ng h/ml). Overall, the result indicated prolonged delivery with significant improvement in oral bioavailability of acyclovir from mucoadhesive microspheres due to enhanced retention in the upper GI tract

    Effect of P-Glycoprotein on the Rat Intestinal Permeability and Metabolism of the BDDCS Class 1 Drug Verapamil

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    The Biopharmaceutics Drug Disposition Classification System (BDDCS) predicts intestinal transporter effects to be clinically insignificant following oral dosing for highly soluble and highly permeable/metabolized drugs (class 1 drugs). We investigated the effect of inhibiting P-glycoprotein (P-gp) on the in vitro rat intestinal permeability (Papp) and metabolism of the class 1 drug verapamil. Jejunal segments from Sprague-Dawley rats fasted overnight were mounted in Ussing chambers filled with 10 mL of Krebs-Ringer buffer (KRB). For P-gp inhibition studies, GG918 0.5 μM was added to the KRB solution. The experiment started by the addition of verapamil (1 or 10 μM) to either apical or basolateral sides. Samples from verapamil donor and receiver compartments were collected at 30 s and 0.166, 0.5, 1, 1.83 and 3 h after the start of the experiment. Analysis of verapamil and its major metabolite, norverapamil, in the samples and intracellularly at 3 h was performed by HPLC. The same experiment was repeated with norverapamil 10 μM (verapamil metabolite), digoxin 100 nM (positive control for P-gp activity) and atorvastatin 1 and 10 μM (example of a class 2 drug). For 1 μM verapamil, efflux ratio (B to A Papp/A to B Papp) was 4.6 and markedly decreased by GG918 (efflux ratio = 1.1). For 10 μM verapamil efflux ratio was 4.1 (control) vs 1.8 (GG918), comparable to the change seen for digoxin 100 nM with an efflux ratio of 3.6 (control) vs 1.6 (with GG918) and atorvastatin (efflux ratio of 5.2 and 3.0 for atorvastatin 1.0 and 10 μM, respectively, changed to 1.0 and 0.65 with GG918). The changes observed in the norverapamil 10 μM experiment were also significant, where efflux ratio decreased from 13.5 (control) to 1.5 (GG918). The extraction ratio (ER) of 10 μM verapamil to norverapamil decreased from 0.41 after an apical dose to 0.21 after a basolateral dose, but was unaffected by the incubation with GG918. The results suggest that P-gp inhibition has an effect on class 1 drug verapamil and class 2 drug atorvastatin Papp in the rat intestine. Moreover, a stronger P-gp effect on the Papp of the more polar norverapamil metabolite was observed. Papp changes caused by the P-gp inhibitor GG918 do not affect the extent of verapamil metabolism
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