Fabrication of submicrometer-sized meloxicam particles using femtosecond laser ablation in gas and liquid environments

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Abstract

In pharmaceutical development, more and more drugs are classified as poorly watersoluble or insoluble. Particle size reduction is a common way to fight this trend by improving dissolution rate, transport characteristics and bioavailability. Pulsed laser ablation is a groundbreaking technique of drug particle generation in the nano-and micrometer size range. Meloxicam, a commonly used nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug with poor water solubility, was chosen as the model drug. The pastille pressed meloxicam targets were irradiated by a Ti:sapphire laser (τ = 135 fs, λc = 800 nm) in air and in distilled water. Fourier transform infrared and Raman spectroscopies were used for chemical characterization and scanning electron microscopy to determine morphology and size. Additional particle size studies were performed using a scanning mobility particle sizer. Our experiments demonstrated that significant particle size reduction can be achieved with laser ablation both in air and in distilled water without any chemical change of meloxicam. The size of the ablated particles (~50 nm to a few microns) is approximately at least one-tenth of the size (~10–50 micron) of commercially available meloxicam crystals. Furthermore, nanoaggregate formation was described during pulsed laser ablation in air, which was scarcely studied for drug/organic molecules before.

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Nagy, E., Andrásik, A., Smausz, T., Ajtai, T., Kun-Szabó, F., Kopniczky, J., … Hopp, B. (2021). Fabrication of submicrometer-sized meloxicam particles using femtosecond laser ablation in gas and liquid environments. Nanomaterials, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/nano11040996

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