50 research outputs found

    Impact of gastrointestinal tract variability on oral drug absorption and pharmacokinetics : an UNGAP review

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    The absorption of oral drugs is frequently plagued by significant variability with potentially serious therapeutic consequences. The source of variability can be traced back to interindividual variability in physiology, differences in special populations (age- and disease-dependent), drug and formulation properties, or food-drug interactions. Clinical evidence for the impact of some of these factors on drug pharmacokinetic variability is mounting: e.g. gastric pH and emptying time, small intestinal fluid properties, differences in pediatrics and the elderly, and surgical changes in gastrointestinal anatomy. However, the link of colonic factors variability (transit time, fluid composition, microbiome), sex differences (male vs. female) and gut-related diseases (chronic constipation, anorexia and cachexia) to drug absorption variability has not been firmly established yet. At the same time, a way to decrease oral drug pharmacokinetic variability is provided by the pharmaceutical industry: clinical evidence suggests that formulation approaches employed during drug development can decrease the variability in oral exposure. This review outlines the main drivers of oral drug exposure variability and potential approaches to overcome them, while highlighting existing knowledge gaps and guiding future studies in this area

    Simulation of gastric lipolysis and prediction of felodipine release from a matrix tablet in the fed stomach

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    The importance of intragastric lipolysis to felodipine release from a hydrophilic, extended release tablet in the fed stomach was assessed in USP II apparatus with the tablet fixed on a steel wire above the paddle. The release medium, homogenized long-life milk, was gradually digested with shots of acidic solutions of pepsin over the course of the experiment in absence and in presence of biorelevant concentrations of a lipase that was similar to human gastric lipase. Percentage tablet erosion at specific times in the same media was measured in separate experiments. The data were compared to published data for intragastric release in fed healthy adults. In all cases, felodipine release occurred under sink conditions. Lipase facilitated felodipine release from the eroded polymer, bringing the release profile closer to the in vivo data. Likewise, the relationship between tablet erosion and amount of released felodipine reflected the in vivo data only when lipase was added to the medium. It was concluded that modelling intragastric lipolysis is necessary in order to simulate felodipine release from the extended release tablets in the fed stomach.</p

    Simulation of gastric lipolysis and prediction of felodipine release from a matrix tablet in the fed stomach

    No full text
    The importance of intragastric lipolysis to felodipine release from a hydrophilic, extended release tablet in the fed stomach was assessed in USP II apparatus with the tablet fixed on a steel wire above the paddle. The release medium, homogenized long-life milk, was gradually digested with shots of acidic solutions of pepsin over the course of the experiment in absence and in presence of biorelevant concentrations of a lipase that was similar to human gastric lipase. Percentage tablet erosion at specific times in the same media was measured in separate experiments. The data were compared to published data for intragastric release in fed healthy adults. In all cases, felodipine release occurred under sink conditions. Lipase facilitated felodipine release from the eroded polymer, bringing the release profile closer to the in vivo data. Likewise, the relationship between tablet erosion and amount of released felodipine reflected the in vivo data only when lipase was added to the medium. It was concluded that modelling intragastric lipolysis is necessary in order to simulate felodipine release from the extended release tablets in the fed stomach. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    An experimental approach in conceptualizing typographic signals of documents by eight-dot and six-dot braille code

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    The main research aim of the present study focuses on issues of reading comprehension, when users with blindness receive typographic meta-data by touch through a braille display. Levels of reading comprehension are investigated by the use of 6-dot and 8-dot braille code in matched texts for the cases of bold and italic meta-data. The results indicated a slight superiority of the 8-dot braille code in reading time and scorings. The discussion considered the practical implications of the findings such as issues regarding education as well as the development of suitable design of tactile rendition of typographic signals through 6-dot or 8-dot braille code in favor of better perception and comprehension. © 2014 Springer International Publishing
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