Florence E Eichie , Roland S Okor
Department of Pharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria;For correspondence:- Florence Eichie Email: eichie@uniben.edu
Published: 23 December 2002
Citation: Eichie FE, Okor RS. Parameters to be Considered in the Simulation of Drug Release from Aspirin Crystals and their Microcapsules. Trop J Pharm Res 2002; 1(2):99-110 doi: 10.4314/tjpr.v1i2.7
© 2002 The authors.
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) and the Budapest Open Access Initiative (http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read), which permit unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited..
Method: Four single crystals of aspirin of varied weight and orthorhombic in shape or their microcapsules also of varied weights were randomly selected for the study. The microcapsules were walled with an acrylatemethacrylate copolymer (wall thickness, 11 ì m ). The following parameters were evaluated: the order of release, the dissolution rate constant, k (crystals), the diffusion coefficient, D (microcapsules), the maximum release m¥ and time to attain it t ¥. These parameters were in turn used to simulate the release profiles of hypothetical single particles of a wide range size distribution, 0.3 – 1.4 mm at 0.1mm intervals.
Results: The empirical single crystals exhibited an initial zero order (93%; dissolution constant = 4.4 min
-1 ) followed by a first order release (6%; dissolution constant = 0.38 min -1). Maximum release from each of the crystals was 99% of the initial particle weight; thus m¥ was a constant fraction of the initial particle weight. A zero order release consistent with a Fickian diffusion model was displayed by the single microcapsules (diffusion coefficient, 5.4x10 -4 mm 2 min -1 ). At same particle weight the release parameters m¥ , t ¥, and the slopes of the rate order plots compared favourably with the theoretical data.
Conclusion: The study indicates that the empirical release data on a few single particles can be used to predict the release profiles of single particles of a wide range of size distribution. This finding may be exploited in the prediction of drug release from polydisperse systems.
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