Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8414894 | European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Towards the development of a thermosensitive drug-delivery vehicle for nasal delivery, a systematic series of N-trimethyl chitosan chloride polymers, synthesised from chitosans of three different average molecular weights, have been co-formulated into a hydrogel with poly(ethylene glycol) and glycerophosphate. Rheological evaluations have shown that hydrogels derived from N-trimethyl chitosan with a low degree of quaternisation and high or medium average molecular weight exhibit relatively short sol-gel transition times at physiologically relevant gelation temperatures. Also, the same hydrogels display good water-holding capacity and strong mucoadhesive potential, and their mixtures with mucus exhibit rheological synergy. An aqueous hydrogel formulation, derived from N-trimethyl chitosan of medium average molecular weight and low degree of quaternisation, appears particularly promising in that it exhibits most favourable rheological and mucoadhesive behaviour and a sol-gel transition that occurs at 32.5 °C within 7 min.
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Authors
H. Nazar, D.G. Fatouros, S.M. van der Merwe, N. Bouropoulos, G. Avgouropoulos, J. Tsibouklis, M. Roldo,