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Original Articles

Solute Permeability of Certain Polymeric Films Applied on Aspirin Crystals to Form Microcapsules

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Pages 801-810 | Received 18 Jan 2006, Accepted 01 Mar 2006, Published online: 10 Nov 2011
 

A study was carried out to investigate the solute permeability of various polymer films applied on aspirin crystal to form microcapsules. The coating materials were an acrylate methacrylate (AMA), poly 3‐hydroxybutyrate‐hydroxyvalerate (Biopol®) and poly (lactic‐glycolic) acid (PLGA). Organic solutions of the polymers were applied on the aspirin crystals (core) by a spray coating technique in a Wurster column. The microcapsule surfaces were investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), while permeability studies were carried out on single microcapsules serving as micro dialysis cells. The amount of drug (m) permeating through the applied films in time (t) was analysed on the basis of Fickian diffusion. The SEM revealed numerous surface pores of size range 2.4 to 24 μm for the AMA films, while the PLGA and Biopol films, on the other hand, exhibited very few surface pores of size range 2.2 to 18 μm. However, the AMA films were more spongy than the PLGA and Biopol. The AMA films displayed a retarded release while the PLGA or Biopol films displayed a burst release, attributable to the differences in the film's porous structure. The Permeability coefficient (P) depended on the core weight of the single microcapsules, decreasing with increase in core weight. Thus, for an ensemble of the microcapsules the permeability coefficients of the films of the component microcapsules will have a distribution of P values even though the coating material is the same. This finding is important in the simulation of drug release from coated multiparticulate systems.

Acknowledgement

The authors wish to thank Deutscher Akadedmischer Austausdienst (DAAD) Germany for sponsoring this collaborative research.

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