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1.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the viability and permeability of carbamazepine (CBZ) solubilized in fully dilutable non-ionic microemulsions across Caco-2 cells used as a model for intestinal epithelium. Maximum solubilization capacity (SC) of CBZ was determined within water-in-oil (W/O), bicontinuous and oil-in-water (O/W) structures formed upon dilution. The effect of the nature of the oil phase, surfactant type, and the ratio between the oil phase and surfactant on the quantity of solubilized CBZ, droplets size, the viability of the cells and drug permeability was elucidated. We found that: (1) several fully dilutable microemulsions based on pharma-grade ingredients can be loaded with very significant amounts of CBZ, (2) W/O microemulsions (10wt% water) exhibit up to 3-fold higher solubilization capacity over the drug's solubility in oil (triacetin), (3) CBZ in the O/W microemulsions (80wt% water) exhibit up to 29-fold higher solubilization than in water, (4) the O/W droplets of the examined systems are 9-11nm in size, (5) the highest permeability was obtained in systems containing triacetin/alpha-tocopherol acetate/ethanol in 3/1/4wt% ratio as oil phase and Tween 60 as surfactant, (6) the replacement of alpha-tocopherol acetate by alpha-tocopherol inhibits CBZ release, (7) replacement of a saturated chain of Tween 60 by an unsaturated (Tween 80) or shorter chain (Tween 40) inhibited drug release, (8) the decrease in the oil phase to surfactant ratio leads to enhancement of drug release (dilution line 64>dilution line 73).  相似文献   

2.
The phase behavior and structure of sucrose ester/water/oil systems in the presence of long-chain cosurfactant (monolaurin) and small amounts of ionic surfactants was investigated by phase study and small angle X-ray scattering. In a water/sucrose ester/monolaurin/decane system at 27 degrees C, instead of a three-phase microemulsion, lamellar liquid crystals are formed in the dilute region. Unlike other systems in the presence of alcohol as cosurfactant, the HLB composition does not change with dilution, since monolaurin adsorbs almost completely in the interface. The addition of small amounts of ionic surfactant, regardless of the counterion, increases the solubilization of water in W/O microemulsions. The solubilization on oil in O/W microemulsions is not much affected, but structuring is induced and a viscous isotropic phase is formed. At high ionic surfactant concentrations, the single-phase microemulsion disappears and liquid crystals are favored.  相似文献   

3.
The dissipative particle dynamics simulation method is adopted to investigate the microemulsion systems prepared with surfactant (H1T1), oil (O) and water (W), which are expressed by coarse-grained models. Two topologies of O/W and W/O microemulsions are simulated with various oil and water ratios. Inverse W/O microemulsion transform to O/W microemulsion by decreasing the ratio of oil-water from 3:1 to 1:3. The stability of O/W and W/O microemulsion is controlled by shear rate, inorganic salt and the temperature, and the corresponding results are analyzed by the translucent three-dimensional structure, the mean interfacial tension and end-to-end distance of H1T1. The results show that W/O microemulsion is more stable than O/W microemulsion to resist higher inorganic salt concentration, shear rate and temperature. This investigation provides a powerful tool to predict the structure and the stability of various microemulsion systems, which is of great importance to developing new multifunctional microemulsions for multiple applications.  相似文献   

4.
The influence that 1,3-butyleneglycol incorporated as polar cosolvent in the aqueous phase determine on the O/ W micromulsion region of the classical system water/ sodium dodecyl sulfate/ pentanol/ heptane, has been studied. Phase diagrams corresponding to aqueous phases made of water/ butyleneglycol in ratios 907sol; 10 and 75/ 25 are compared with the typical system with water.The resulting increase on the OAV microemulsion region for the systems including the glycol, provides a security margin to prepare such compositions with respect to the narrow channel of solubility described for the conventional system. Although the presence of butyleneglycol lead to a shift in the optimal ratio between the aqueous phase and SDS from the 85/ 15 described for the typical system to higher proportions in surfactant, the simplicity of preparation of such O/W microemulsions could compensate the higher amount of SDS required  相似文献   

5.
The systems investigated were water/sucrose laurate/ethoxylated mono-di-glyceride/oleic phase. The oleic phase used first was the pure oils R (+)-limonene, isopropylmyristate, and caprylic-capric triglyceride; these oils were then mixed with ethanol at different mixing ratios (w/w). The total area of the one phase microemulsion region is dependent on the mixing ratios (w/w) of the mixed surfactants and that of the ethanol/oil. The largest microemulsion phase area formed with a surfactants mixing ratio (w/w) equals unity. For the systems where the oleic phase was a mixture of oil and ethanol, the total area of the monophasic microemulsion increases with the increase in the ethanol/oil mixing ratio (w/w). The Gibbs free energy of solubilization was estimated. It increases as the mixing ratio (w/w) of ethoxylated mono-di-glyceride/sucrose laurate increases and with the increase in the ethanol/oil mixing ratio (w/w). The Gibbs free energy of solubilization decreases with the increase in the water content in the water-in-oil microemulsions. The values of the Gibbs free energy of solubilization are higher for oil-in-water microemulsions compared to those of the water-in-oil microemulsions.  相似文献   

6.
We compare two ternary microemulsions, stabilized by the nonionic surfactant pentaethylene‐glycol‐dodecyl‐ether (C12E5), containing decane or hexadecane. The comparison involves phase behavior and properties of O/W droplet microemulsions investigated with SAXS, static and dynamic light scattering, and NMR. Striking differences are observed. The systems are analyzed in terms of curvature elastic properties of surfactant film. Apart from an increase of the spontaneous curvature, there also appears to be a small but significant increase in the saddle splay constant as the oil chain length is increased.  相似文献   

7.
Solubilization capacity and structural transformations in nonionic microemulsions characterized by a large continuous isotropic region forming dilutable self-assembled nanodroplets containing solubilized carbamazepine, were studied along dilution lines 73 and 82 (70 and 80 wt% surfactant and 30 and 20 wt% of oil phase, respectively). The preparations were based on pharma-grade ingredients, water, R-(+)-limonene, ethanol, propylene glycol, and Tween 60. Solubilization capacity (SC) of the drug was dependent on the microstructure of the microemulsion and on the surfactant-to-oil phase weight ratio. The SC in the concentrate (reversed micelles) was 15 times higher than its solubility in the oil. Transition of the W/O microemulsion to a bicontinuous phase and to O/W droplets were indentified by electrical conductivity, viscosity, SAXS, and SD-NMR measurements. Once the system is diluted to 90 wt% aqueous phase, the SC is 10 and 16-fold higher, along dilution lines 73 and 82, respectively, than in pure water. Being solubilized, carbamazepine serves as a cosurfactant therefore it affects the curvatures of the microstructures and consequently the boundaries of the structural regions and the transition points between the different phases. Dilutable microemulsions are promising new carbamazepine vehicles for oral intake.  相似文献   

8.
In this study we estimated the structural parameters of (water+propylene glycol)/sucrose esters/(benzaldhyde+ethanol) systems. The weight ratios of water/propylene glycol and that of benzaldhyde/ethanol equal 2 and 1, respectively. The sucrose esters were sucrose laurates (L595, L1695, and SM1200), sucrose myristate (M1695), sucrose palmitate (P1670), sucrose oleate (O1570), and sucrose stearate (S1570). The pseudoternary phase behavior at 37°C was explored to determine the extension of the microemulsion phase regions. A one‐phase microemulsion region extending from the oil rich region to the water rich corner was observed in these systems. It was found that minor changes in the surfactant chain length, structure, and composition suffice to provoke a considerable change in the aggregation number, core radius and interfacial area per surfactant and cosurfactant molecules head groups in the formed microemulsions. The interfacial area per surfactant head group decreases with the increase in the surfactant chain length. For a sucrose ester with a given chain length the interfacial area per surfactant head group decreases with the increase in the surfactant monoester content. The interfacial area per surfactant head group increases with the increase in the surfactant concentration and the water core volume in the formulated microemulsions.  相似文献   

9.
The effect ofn-butyl glycol ethers used as cosurfactants on the microemulsions formulated with two nonionic surfactants, hexaoxyethylene glycol monolauryl ether and sorbitan monolaurate, is presented on ternary phase diagrams. The solubilization parameters as well as isothermal invariant points (IIP) of microemulsions were correlated with the solubility parameters of cosurfactants. An optimum solubility parameter of cosurfactants was established around 9 (cal/cm3)1/2 where both IIP and solubilization parameters are optimal for water and oil solubilization with the lowest concentration of amphiphilic compounds. The mixture of cosurfactants can be used to obtain a certain transition on the phase diagram and so to achieve certain characteristics for microemulsions, especially to tailor the solvency of the system.On leave from the University of Bucharest Department of Physical Chemistry Bdul Republicii 13 Bucharest, Romania  相似文献   

10.
Different microemulsions were prepared with and without mefenamic acid (MFA). The base microemulsion was mainly composed of distilled water; the aqueous phase, propylene carbonate; the oil phase, potassium oleate; the surfactant, and finally di-ethylene glycol; the cosurfactant. The effect of mixing ionic (potassium oleate) with nonionic (Tween-20) surfactant was investigated via constructing the phase diagrams of such systems. Changes in conductivity and viscosity of the freshly prepared microemulsion over time were monitored as an indication for the stability of the microemulsion. Measurements were carried out at room temperature, after a freeze-thaw cycle and also after storage for 3 days at 60°C, where the latter is treated as an accelerated test for the time-temperature effects on the stability of a microemulsion. It was found that a set of surfactants, instead of a single surfactant, and inclusion of cosurfactant resulted in a broader region where a stable microemulsion is predominant. At a mass ratio of 1:2 of potassium oleate to Tween-20, O/W microemulsions were found to have maximum stability among all examined systems, under the accelerated test, such that they have a minimum portion of combined surfactants and cosurfactant of 60 wt% and maximum of 80 wt%. With the aforementioned specifications, no phase separation and neither significant change in the conductivity nor in the viscosity was observed in any of the examined systems after subjecting them both to the accelerated and freeze-thaw cycle test, indicating that such systems were thermodynamically stable. Samples of micro emulsions passing previous tests were further subjected to an acidic medium by dispersing 1 g of MFA-containing microemulsion in 10 g HCl solution (pH 1) in a shaking water bath at 37°C, for a 6 hour period. The maximum solubility of MFA in a stable microemulsion was approximately 5 wt%, evaluated at room temperature.  相似文献   

11.
The conditions to obtain W/0 microemulsions using ionic surfactants and a nonionic cosurfactant, a polyoxyethylene alkyl ether, were investigated. The length of the polyoxyethylene chain was critical to obtain the typical water solubilization maximum

The variation of the W/0 microemulsion region with hydrocarbon content was different from that of the usual type of microemulsions having a medium chain length alcohol as cosurfactant. In the present systems the W/0 microemulsion region was not a direct continuation of the inverse micellar area at zero content of hydrocarbon. Addition of hydrocarbon was necessary for the formation of inverse micelles

The microemulsion regions were sensitive to the kind of hydrocarbon used; a sign of the importance of the nonionic surfactant for the stability of this kind of microemulsions.  相似文献   

12.
The phase conditions in a system of water, hexadecane, sodium dodecyl sulphate, and di-ethylene glycol dodecyl ether showed theW/O microemulsions to be obtained first after destabilization of a liquid crystalline phase by addition of the hexadecane. The original lamellar liquid crystalline phase was moved towards higher surfactant/cosurfactant ratios and a new phase with inverse amphiphile cylinders in a hexagonal packing appeared.  相似文献   

13.
《Chemical physics letters》1987,141(4):357-360
Two-phase systems consisting of water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsions in equilibrium with excess water and oil-in-water (O/W) microemulsions in equilibrium with excess oil have been prepared using the surfactant sodium bis (2-ethylhexyl)sulphosuccinate (AOT) without cosurfactant. The interfacial tension of the planar interface separating the phases for the W/O case is only weakly dependent upon the volume fraction of droplets in the microemulsion phase whereas for the O/W case, the microemulsion droplet size increases and the tension drops as the dispersed volume fraction is increased.  相似文献   

14.
Microemulsions (ME) containing hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HTAB)/ethanol as surfactant, isopropylmyristate (IM) or butylstearate (BS) as oil phase and aqueous buffer were studied. Pseudo-ternary phase diagrams of the investigated systems were obtained at constant surfactant/cosurfactant molar ratio (1:5) by titration in order to characterize the proportions between the components to obtain clear systems. Oil in water microemulsions were prepared in a wide range of phase volume (phi). UV-vis absorption spectra of naproxen at pH 5.5 showed that the solubility of Np increases significantly in the presence of O/W ME in high phase volumes. For both, IM and BS microemulsions, the dynamic light scattering experiments showed that the size of the oil droplets remains constant in low values of phi, increasing abruptly in high phi values. Phase solubility study revealed that for both IM and BS microemulsions, the drug incorporation followed a straight-line profile in all range of phi. The data could be analyzed through the phase-separation model and the association constants (K) calculated varied from 27 to 90 M(-1), depending on the pH and on the microemulsion oil phase.  相似文献   

15.
Celecoxib (clxb) is an important drug for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis by specifically inhibiting the enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). Clxb is a type 2 drug characterized by low water solubility (<5 mug/ml) and fast transmembrane transport. The present formulations require high dosage since the transmembrane transport fluctuates and is very difficult to control. Dissolving the drug within an oil phase was not practical since its dissolution was very small and its dispersion in water was impossible. In our recent studies, we learned to construct U-type phase diagrams and to formulate reverse microemulsions (oil-based concentrates) that are progressively and fully dilutable with aqueous phase. In the present study, we solubilized clxb in nanostructures of reverse micelles of U-type nonionic microemulsions that consisted of R(+)-limonene, alcohol, propylene glycol (PG), and hydrophilic surfactant (Tween 60). The solubilization capacity of the drug in these systems is many times higher than in either the oil or the aqueous phase. The clxb solubilized microemulsions are fully diluted with aqueous phase without phase separation. The solubilization capacity decreases as the water content increases. Electrical conductivity, viscosity, and self-diffusion (SD) coefficients of the microemulsion components were measured along a suitable water dilution line. The three major microemulsion regions were detected and the transitions between the W/O to bicontinuous phase and from this phase to the O/W droplets were identified (at 30 and 70 wt% aqueous phase, respectively). From the SD coefficients, it was found that the drug is initially solubilized at the interface of the W/O droplets and there are no significant structural changes. The transition to a bicontinuous phase occurs at the same water content as in the empty (i.e., without drug) system. From the viscosity profiles, we concluded that the drug affects the structure of the bicontinuous phase as reflected in the water content at which the oil-continuous network is destroyed and full inversion occurs (50 vs 55 wt% in the drug-loaded system). Upon further dilution the drug remains solubilized at the interface and is oriented with its hydrophilic part facing the water, and is strongly affects the inversion to O/W droplets. From Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS) measurements we learned that the drug effects the structure of microemulsion droplets and forms "ill-defined structures," probably less spherical. Yet, the overall droplet sizes at the high dilutions did not change very much.  相似文献   

16.
Polar/amphiphilic oils, called lipophilic linkers, are sometimes added to oil-water-ionic surfactant microemulsions in order to increase the solubilization of hydrophobic oils. The solubilization increase has been well documented for a number of systems. However, mathematical models to calculate the solubilization increase have been proposed only for optimum microemulsions (i.e., middle phase microemulsions solubilizing equal volumes of oil and water). In this paper we propose a model, which predicts solubilization enhancement for non-optimum microemulsion systems as well. The model is an extension of the net-average curvature model of microemulsion. The net-average curvature model is combined with a surface activity model to account for the increased palisade layer solubilization due to the presence of the polar/amphiphilic oil component. New non-linear mixing rules are also incorporated to account for the optimum salinity and the characteristic length variation of the anionic surfactant microemulsion as a function of the lipophilic linker concentration. The model predicts the effect of the lipophilic linker and the electrolyte concentration on the oil solubilization in accordance with the experimental results.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of amino acids on crystal growth of CaC2O4 in reverse microemulsion   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Crystal growth of calcium oxalate (CaC2O4) in bulk aqueous solution, reverse microemulsion of p-octyl polyethylene glycol phenylether (OP)/iso-octyl alcohol (IOA)/cydohexane/water and above microemulsions containing different kinds of amino acids, such as aspartic acid (Asp), tyrosine (Tyr) and tryptophan (Trp) were studied. The results indicated that different crystallization types of the crystals, which were calcium oxalate monohydrate (COM), calcium oxalate dihydrate (COD) and calcium oxalate trihydrate (COT), existed in bulk aqueous solution. But CaC2O4 growth mainly paralleled with (1 01) plane of COM in reverse microemulsion because of the induction of surfactant at water/oil interface. After adding amino acids into microemulsions, the growth of CaC2O4 crystals mainly influenced by the varieties of amino acids and the pH values of the amino acid aqueous solution. When pH values of the solutions was higher than isoelectric points of amino acids, CaC2O4 crystal paralleled with (1 01) plane of COM more easily with the addition of Trp, Tyr, Asp in turn; however, when pH of the solutions was lower than isoelectric points of Trp, CaC2O4 crystal growth paralleled with (020) face of COM. It is obviously that amino acids, pH values of the solutions and surfactant played important roles in the process of crystal growth of CaC2O4 in the microemulsions. The formation mechanism of CaC2O4 was also discussed in different microemulsions at last.  相似文献   

18.
Effect of added oil (heptane or squalane) on the microemulsion structures in polyoxyethylene dodecyl ether (C12EOn) systems was investigated by means of phase behavior and NMR diffusion experiments. In the binary water-C12EOn systems, an isotropic fluid, D2 (or L3), and an aqueous micellar solution, Wm, phases are successively formed with increasing the EO-chain length. Upon addition of heptane, D2 and Wm phases are merged and a microemulsion of large solubilization is produced at a low surfactant concentration. With squalane, the solubilization of oil in D2 phase is very low or almost zero, whereas the oil solubilization in Wm phase is relatively large. These structural changes in microemulsions are discussed based on the self-diffusion coefficients of water, oil, and surfactant measured by the PGSE-NMR method. The difference in the phase behavior may be attributed to the difference in the penetration tendency of oil in the surfactant palisade layer.  相似文献   

19.
The systems investigated by fluorescence spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy were water/sucrose laurate/oil + ethanol. The oils were R (+)-limonene and isopropylmyristate. The mixing ratio (w/w) of ethanol/oil equals unity. The fluorescent probes auramine-O and 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid were used to determine the minimum ω′ value for the transition of reverse micelles to microemulsions in the systems based on the two oils, as well as at different surfactant contents. The fluorescence quenching of Safranine-T (3, 6-diamino-2,7-dimethyl-5 phenyl phenazinium chloride) by the inorganic ions Fe2+, Fe3+, and Cu2+ was studied in reverse micelles and microemulsions. The Stern-Volmer quenching constants at different water/surfactant molar ratios (ω values) were calculated from the data of the quenching process. Atomic force microscopy was used to image the systems based on the two oils for different water to surfactant molar ratios below and above the minimum ω′ value.  相似文献   

20.
Since large amounts of oils, surfactants and penetration enhancers used in microemulsion systems might lead to seriously skin irritation, the percutaneous absorption and penetration of indomethacin(IMC, model drug) from O/W microemulsion were enhanced by simply changing the composition of cosurfactants. Pseudo-ternary phase diagrams were constructed with mixed cosurfactants at different ratios. Hairless rat skin was used as a barrier for permeation experiments. Four formulations were prepared with fixed oil, surfactant and different cosurfactant content(4%, 20% and 20%, mass fraction), and formulation F4 with menthol added was evaluated to compare the enhancement effect of it with those of mixed cosurfactants. The O/W microemulsion region was the largest when the mass ratio of ethanol/transcutol was 1:1. However, the region changed slightly for the system with incorporated mixed cosurfactants propylene glycol/transcutol. The flux and skin retention of IMC from O/W microemulsion with mixed cosurfactants were much higher than that with single cosurfactant(P<0.01), while incorporation of menthol would only enhance the drug flux through the skin. To conclude, mixed cosufactants could affect the phase behavior and improve the percutaneous absorption and penetration of IMC. Based on this, it provided a promising solution to enhance drug release from microemulsions without raising potential skin damage.  相似文献   

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