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Research Article

Extrusion-Spheronization of Blends of Carbopol 934 and Microcrystalline Cellulose

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Pages 381-391 | Published online: 30 Apr 2001
 

Abstract

We evaluated the effects of several process variables on the pharmaceutical and drug release properties of extrusion-spheronization pellets of blends of Carbopol 934 and microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) containing a high proportion of Carbopol. The model drug was theophylline. Rheological monitoring during mixing was by mixer torque rheometry. Carbopol:MCC blends wetted with a CaCl2 solution showed different rheological behavior compared to blends with a high proportion of MCC wetted with water only. In contrast to previous suggestions, the optimal wetting point for extrusion did not coincide with the point of peak torque, but occurred just beyond this point, at much lower torque. The influence of process variables on blend properties was investigated with a three-variable factorial design (Carbopol:MCC ratio, wetting liquid proportion, CaCl2 :Carbopol ratio), and the influence of process variables on pellet properties with a four-variable design (the variables listed plus extrusion screen hole diameter). Blend torque values were strongly influenced by CaCl2 proportion, while mean pellet diameter was influenced by Carbopol:MCC ratio. Mean pellet diameter also differed depending on whether the pellets contained theophylline. The observed among-formulation differences in theophylline release kinetics were largely explained by differences in pellet size and theophylline hydration state. Compaction of pellets to form tablets markedly modified the drug release profile, making it biphasic.

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