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Research Article

The characteristics of betamethasone-loaded chitosan microparticles by spray-drying method

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Pages 459-472 | Received 11 Jun 2003, Accepted 11 Jun 2003, Published online: 11 Jun 2003
 

Abstract

Betamethasone (BTM)-loaded microparticles prepared by a spray drying method using chitosan (CTS) as raw material, type-A gelatin and ethylene oxide-propylene oxide block copolymer (Pluronic F68) as modifiers. The BTM-loaded in varied chitosan/Pluronic F68/gelatin microparticle formulations was investigated. By properly choosing excipient type and concentration a high degree of control was achieved over the physical properties of the BTM-loaded microparticles. Microparticle characteristics (zeta potential, tap density, particle size and yield), loading efficiencies, microparticle morphology and in-vitro release properties were examined. Surface morphological characteristics and surface charges of prepared microparticles were observed by using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and microelectrophoresis. A SEM micrograph shows that the particle sizes of the varied chitosan composed microparticles ranged from 1.1-4.7 μ m and the external surfaces appear smooth. The BTM-loaded microparticles entrapped in the chitosan/Pluronic F68/gelatin microparticles with trapping efficiencies up to 93%, collected yield rate 44%, and mean particle size varied between 1-3 μ m, positive surface charge (20-40 mv), and tap densities (0.04-0.40 g/cm3) were obtained. The collected BTM yield and size of particle was increased with increasing BTM-loaded amount but both zeta potential and tap density of the particles decreased with increasing BTM-loaded amount. The in vitro release of BTM showed a dose-dependent burst followed by a slower release phase that was proportional to the drug concentration in the concentration range between 5-30%w/w. The in vitro drug release from the chitosan/Pluronic F68/gelatin 1/0.1/0.4 microspheres had a prolong release pattern. These formulation factors were correlated to particulate characteristics for optimizing BTM microspheres in pulmonary delivery.

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