Instrumentation of Flow-Through USP IV Dissolution Apparatus to Assess Poorly Soluble Basic Drug Products: a Technical Note
Author | Paprskarova, Alice |
Author | Mozna, Petra |
Author | Oga, Enoche F. |
Author | Elhissi, Abdelbary |
Author | Alhnan, Mohamed A. |
Available date | 2021-06-07T09:59:14Z |
Publication Date | 2016 |
Publication Name | AAPS PharmSciTech |
Resource | Scopus |
Abstract | Supersaturation and precipitation are common limitations encountered especially with poorly soluble basic drugs. The aims of this work were to explore the pattern of dissolution and precipitation of poorly soluble basic drugs using a United States Pharmacopoeia (USP) IV dissolution apparatus and to compare it to the widely used USP II dissolution apparatus. In order to investigate the influence of gastric emptying time on bioavailability, tables of two model drugs (dipyridamole 100 mg and cinnarizine 15 mg) were investigated and pH change from 1.2 to 6.8 were achieved after 10, 20 or 30 min using USP II or USP IV dissolution apparatuses. Using USP II, dipyridamole and cinnarizine concentrations dropped instantly as a result of drug precipitation with drug crystals evident in the dissolution vessel. At pH change times of 10, 20 and 30 min, the total amount of dissolved drug was dependent on pH change time. Using USP IV, at a flow rate of 8 ml/min, it was possible to have comparable release to agitation at 50 rpm using USP II suggesting that comparable hydrodynamic forces are possible. No drop in drug percentage occurs as the dissolved fraction was readily emptied from the flow cell, preventing drug accumulation in the dissolution medium. However, a negligible percentage of drug release took place following pH change. In conclusion, the use of the flow-through cell dissolution provided laminar flow, use of realistic fluid volumes and avoided precipitation of dissolved drug fraction in the gastric phase as it is discharged before pH change |
Language | en |
Publisher | Springer New York LLC |
Subject | cinnarizine dipyridamole hydrochloric acid cinnarizine dipyridamole Article drug accumulation drug solubility flow rate high performance liquid chromatography hydrodynamics laminar flow limit of detection medical device pH priority journal spectrophotometry stomach emptying tablet disintegration United States Pharmacopoeia IV dissolution apparatus bioavailability chemistry metabolism physiology solubility stomach Biological Availability Cinnarizine Dipyridamole Gastric Emptying Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Solubility Stomach |
Type | Article |
Pagination | 1261-1266 |
Issue Number | 5 |
Volume Number | 17 |
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Pharmacy Research [1315 items ]