Journal of Pharmaceutical Investigation
- Volume 22 Issue 3
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- Pages.211-217
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- 1992
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- 2093-5552(pISSN)
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- 2093-6214(eISSN)
Polymer-Coated Liposomes for Oral Drug Delivery (I): Stability of Polysaccharide-Coated Liposomes Against Bile Salts
고분자 코팅을 이용한 경구용 리포좀의 개발(I): 다당체로 코팅된 리포좀의 담즙산염에 대한 안정성
- Choi, Young-Wook (College of Pharmacy, Chung-Ang University) ;
- Hahn, Yang-Hee (College of Pharmacy, Chung-Ang University)
- Published : 1992.09.20
Abstract
Stabilization of liposomes against degradation by bile salts has been investigated in order to develop a liposomal model system for oral drug delivery. Two polysaccharides, amylopectin (AP) and chitin (CT), were employed to coat both empty liposomes and bromthymol blue (BTB)-encapsulated liposomes by adsorption-coating techniques. Turbidity changes and BTB-release characteristics in pH 5.6 buffer solutions with or without bile salts, sodium cholate and sodium glycocholate, were observed to compare the differences between uncoated liposomes and polysaccharide-coated liposomes. Initial turbidities of both uncoated and polysaccharide-coated liposomes in buffer solution were kept constant within 3% range during 4 hours of experiments. But they were decreased in a different manner in bile salts-containing buffer solutions, showing 10% or less decrease for polysaccharide-coated liposomes and 25% or more decrease for uncoated liposomes. BTB release from uncoated liposomes has been greatly increased upto 90% after 4 hours in bile salts-containing buffer solution, which is a clue for breakdown of liposomal vesicles. However, polysaccharide-coated liposomes showed the controlled-release pattern which is proportional to square-root of time, followed by around 50% release for the same time period. Consequently, it is possible to conclude that these polysaccharide-coated liposomes might be an available system for oral delivery of a drug which is unstable in gut environment.