The effect of nanoemulsion as a carrier of hydrophilic compound for transdermal delivery

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Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of nanoemulsions as a carrier vehicle of hydrophilic drug for transdermal delivery. The response surface methodology with a mixture design was used to evaluate the effect of ingredient levels of nanoemulsion formulations including cosurfactant (isopropyl alcohol, 20-30%), surfactant (mixed of Brij 30 and Brij 35, 20-30%), and distilled-water (34.5-50.0%) on properties of the drug-loaded nanoemulsions including physicochemical characters and drug permeability through rat skin. The result showed that the hydrophilic drug in aqueous solution with or without penetration enhancer could not transport across rat skin after 12 h of application. Used nanoemulsions as carrier vehicle, the permeation rate of drug was significantly increased from 0 to 63.23 μg/cm2/h and the lag time was shortened from more than 12 h to about 2.7-4.0 h. Moreover, the drug-loaded nanoemulsion formulation also showed physicochemical stability after 3 month storage at 25°C and 40°C. © 2014 Tsai et al.

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Tsai, M. J., Fu, Y. S., Lin, Y. H., Huang, Y. B., & Wu, P. C. (2014). The effect of nanoemulsion as a carrier of hydrophilic compound for transdermal delivery. PLoS ONE, 9(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102850

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