Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2487625 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2007 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
To account for the effect of branched, parallel transport pathways in the intercellular domain of the stratum corneum (SC) on the passive transdermal transport of hydrophobic permeants, we have developed, from firstâprinciples, a new theoretical model-the TwoâTortuosity Model. This new model requires two tortuosity factors to account for: (1) the effective diffusion path length, and (2) the total volume of the branched, parallel transport pathways present in the SC intercellular domain, both of which may be evaluated from known values of the SC structure. After validating the TwoâTortuosity model with simulated SC diffusion experiments in FEMLAB (a finite element software package), the vehicleâbilayer partition coefficient, Kb, and the lipid bilayer diffusion coefficient, Db, in untreated human SC were evaluated using this new model for two hydrophobic permeants, naphthol (Kb = 225 ± 42, Db = 1.7 à 10â7 ± 0.3 à 10â7 cm2/s) and testosterone (Kb = 92 ± 29, Db = 1.9 à 10â8 ± 0.5 à 10â8 cm2/s). The results presented in this paper demonstrate that this new method to evaluate Kb and Db is comparable to, and simpler than, previous methods, in which SC permeation experiments were combined with octanol-water partition experiments, or with SC solute release experiments, to evaluate Kb and Db. © 2007 WileyâLiss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 96: 3236-3251, 2007
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Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Drug Discovery
Authors
Joseph IV, William Deen, Daniel Blankschtein, Robert Langer,