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Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches

Transdermal therapeutic systems (TTSs) enable convenient dosing in drug therapy. Modified silicone-polymer-based patches are well-controlled and cost-effective matrix diffusion systems. In the present study, we investigated the substance release properties, skin penetration, and analgesic effect of...

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Autores principales: László, Szabolcs, Bátai, István Z., Berkó, Szilvia, Csányi, Erzsébet, Dombi, Ágnes, Pozsgai, Gábor, Bölcskei, Kata, Botz, Lajos, Wagner, Ödön, Pintér, Erika
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9611826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15101279
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author László, Szabolcs
Bátai, István Z.
Berkó, Szilvia
Csányi, Erzsébet
Dombi, Ágnes
Pozsgai, Gábor
Bölcskei, Kata
Botz, Lajos
Wagner, Ödön
Pintér, Erika
author_facet László, Szabolcs
Bátai, István Z.
Berkó, Szilvia
Csányi, Erzsébet
Dombi, Ágnes
Pozsgai, Gábor
Bölcskei, Kata
Botz, Lajos
Wagner, Ödön
Pintér, Erika
author_sort László, Szabolcs
collection PubMed
description Transdermal therapeutic systems (TTSs) enable convenient dosing in drug therapy. Modified silicone-polymer-based patches are well-controlled and cost-effective matrix diffusion systems. In the present study, we investigated the substance release properties, skin penetration, and analgesic effect of this type of TTS loaded with low-dose capsaicin. Release properties were measured in Franz diffusion cell and continuous flow-through cell approaches. Capsaicin was detected with HPLC-UV and UV spectrophotometry. Raman spectroscopy was conducted on human skin samples exposed to the TTS. A surgical incision or carrageenan injection was performed on one hind paw of male Wistar rats. TTSs were applied to the epilated dorsal skin. Patches were kept on the animals for 6 h. The thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical pain threshold of the hind paws were detected. Patches exhibited controlled, zero-order kinetic capsaicin release. According to the Raman mapping, capsaicin penetrated into the epidermis and dermis of human skin, where the target receptors are expressed. The thermal pain threshold drop of the operated rat paws was reversed by capsaicin treatment compared to that of animals treated with control patches. It was concluded that our modified silicone-polymer-based capsaicin-containing TTS is suitable for the relief of traumatic and inflammatory pain.
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spelling pubmed-96118262022-10-28 Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches László, Szabolcs Bátai, István Z. Berkó, Szilvia Csányi, Erzsébet Dombi, Ágnes Pozsgai, Gábor Bölcskei, Kata Botz, Lajos Wagner, Ödön Pintér, Erika Pharmaceuticals (Basel) Article Transdermal therapeutic systems (TTSs) enable convenient dosing in drug therapy. Modified silicone-polymer-based patches are well-controlled and cost-effective matrix diffusion systems. In the present study, we investigated the substance release properties, skin penetration, and analgesic effect of this type of TTS loaded with low-dose capsaicin. Release properties were measured in Franz diffusion cell and continuous flow-through cell approaches. Capsaicin was detected with HPLC-UV and UV spectrophotometry. Raman spectroscopy was conducted on human skin samples exposed to the TTS. A surgical incision or carrageenan injection was performed on one hind paw of male Wistar rats. TTSs were applied to the epilated dorsal skin. Patches were kept on the animals for 6 h. The thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical pain threshold of the hind paws were detected. Patches exhibited controlled, zero-order kinetic capsaicin release. According to the Raman mapping, capsaicin penetrated into the epidermis and dermis of human skin, where the target receptors are expressed. The thermal pain threshold drop of the operated rat paws was reversed by capsaicin treatment compared to that of animals treated with control patches. It was concluded that our modified silicone-polymer-based capsaicin-containing TTS is suitable for the relief of traumatic and inflammatory pain. MDPI 2022-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9611826/ /pubmed/36297391 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15101279 Text en © 2022 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
László, Szabolcs
Bátai, István Z.
Berkó, Szilvia
Csányi, Erzsébet
Dombi, Ágnes
Pozsgai, Gábor
Bölcskei, Kata
Botz, Lajos
Wagner, Ödön
Pintér, Erika
Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title_full Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title_fullStr Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title_full_unstemmed Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title_short Development of Capsaicin-Containing Analgesic Silicone-Based Transdermal Patches
title_sort development of capsaicin-containing analgesic silicone-based transdermal patches
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9611826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ph15101279
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