Cargando…

Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine

The purpose of the study is to develop and assess mucoadhesive in situ nasal gel formulations of loratadine and chlorpheniramine maleate to advance the bioavailability of the drug as compared to its conventional dosage forms. The influence of various permeation enhancers, such as EDTA (0.2% w/v), so...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth, Sherafudeen, Sheri Peedikayil, Rahamathulla, Mohamed, Mathew, Sam Thomarayil, Murali, Sandhya, Alshehri, Sultan, Shakeel, Faiyaz, Alam, Prawez, Sirhan, Ala Yahya, Narayana Iyer, Bhageerathy Anantha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10006938/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36904447
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15051206
_version_ 1784905394824413184
author Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth
Sherafudeen, Sheri Peedikayil
Rahamathulla, Mohamed
Mathew, Sam Thomarayil
Murali, Sandhya
Alshehri, Sultan
Shakeel, Faiyaz
Alam, Prawez
Sirhan, Ala Yahya
Narayana Iyer, Bhageerathy Anantha
author_facet Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth
Sherafudeen, Sheri Peedikayil
Rahamathulla, Mohamed
Mathew, Sam Thomarayil
Murali, Sandhya
Alshehri, Sultan
Shakeel, Faiyaz
Alam, Prawez
Sirhan, Ala Yahya
Narayana Iyer, Bhageerathy Anantha
author_sort Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth
collection PubMed
description The purpose of the study is to develop and assess mucoadhesive in situ nasal gel formulations of loratadine and chlorpheniramine maleate to advance the bioavailability of the drug as compared to its conventional dosage forms. The influence of various permeation enhancers, such as EDTA (0.2% w/v), sodium taurocholate (0.5% w/v), oleic acid (5% w/v), and Pluronic F 127 (10% w/v), on the nasal absorption of loratadine and chlorpheniramine from in situ nasal gels containing different polymeric combinations, such as hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, Carbopol 934, sodium carboxymethylcellulose, and chitosan, is studied. Among these permeation enhancers, sodium taurocholate, Pluronic F127 and oleic acid produced a noticeable increase in the loratadine in situ nasal gel flux compared with in situ nasal gels without permeation enhancer. However, EDTA increased the flux slightly, and in most cases, the increase was insignificant. However, in the case of chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels, the permeation enhancer oleic acid only showed a noticeable increase in flux. Sodium taurocholate and oleic acid seems to be a better and efficient enhancer, enhancing the flux > 5-fold compared with in situ nasal gels without permeation enhancer in loratadine in situ nasal gels. Pluronic F127 also showed a better permeation, increasing the effect by >2-fold in loratadine in situ nasal gels. In chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels with EDTA, sodium taurocholate and Pluronic F127 were equally effective, enhancing chlorpheniramine maleate permeation. Oleic acid has a better effect as permeation enhancer in chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels and showed a maximum permeation enhancement of >2-fold.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10006938
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100069382023-03-12 Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth Sherafudeen, Sheri Peedikayil Rahamathulla, Mohamed Mathew, Sam Thomarayil Murali, Sandhya Alshehri, Sultan Shakeel, Faiyaz Alam, Prawez Sirhan, Ala Yahya Narayana Iyer, Bhageerathy Anantha Polymers (Basel) Article The purpose of the study is to develop and assess mucoadhesive in situ nasal gel formulations of loratadine and chlorpheniramine maleate to advance the bioavailability of the drug as compared to its conventional dosage forms. The influence of various permeation enhancers, such as EDTA (0.2% w/v), sodium taurocholate (0.5% w/v), oleic acid (5% w/v), and Pluronic F 127 (10% w/v), on the nasal absorption of loratadine and chlorpheniramine from in situ nasal gels containing different polymeric combinations, such as hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, Carbopol 934, sodium carboxymethylcellulose, and chitosan, is studied. Among these permeation enhancers, sodium taurocholate, Pluronic F127 and oleic acid produced a noticeable increase in the loratadine in situ nasal gel flux compared with in situ nasal gels without permeation enhancer. However, EDTA increased the flux slightly, and in most cases, the increase was insignificant. However, in the case of chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels, the permeation enhancer oleic acid only showed a noticeable increase in flux. Sodium taurocholate and oleic acid seems to be a better and efficient enhancer, enhancing the flux > 5-fold compared with in situ nasal gels without permeation enhancer in loratadine in situ nasal gels. Pluronic F127 also showed a better permeation, increasing the effect by >2-fold in loratadine in situ nasal gels. In chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels with EDTA, sodium taurocholate and Pluronic F127 were equally effective, enhancing chlorpheniramine maleate permeation. Oleic acid has a better effect as permeation enhancer in chlorpheniramine maleate in situ nasal gels and showed a maximum permeation enhancement of >2-fold. MDPI 2023-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10006938/ /pubmed/36904447 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15051206 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Viswanadhan Vasantha, Prasanth
Sherafudeen, Sheri Peedikayil
Rahamathulla, Mohamed
Mathew, Sam Thomarayil
Murali, Sandhya
Alshehri, Sultan
Shakeel, Faiyaz
Alam, Prawez
Sirhan, Ala Yahya
Narayana Iyer, Bhageerathy Anantha
Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title_full Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title_fullStr Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title_full_unstemmed Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title_short Combination of Cellulose Derivatives and Chitosan-Based Polymers to Investigate the Effect of Permeation Enhancers Added to In Situ Nasal Gels for the Controlled Release of Loratadine and Chlorpheniramine
title_sort combination of cellulose derivatives and chitosan-based polymers to investigate the effect of permeation enhancers added to in situ nasal gels for the controlled release of loratadine and chlorpheniramine
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10006938/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36904447
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15051206
work_keys_str_mv AT viswanadhanvasanthaprasanth combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT sherafudeensheripeedikayil combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT rahamathullamohamed combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT mathewsamthomarayil combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT muralisandhya combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT alshehrisultan combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT shakeelfaiyaz combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT alamprawez combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT sirhanalayahya combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine
AT narayanaiyerbhageerathyanantha combinationofcellulosederivativesandchitosanbasedpolymerstoinvestigatetheeffectofpermeationenhancersaddedtoinsitunasalgelsforthecontrolledreleaseofloratadineandchlorpheniramine