Publications by authors named "Eleftheria Nicolaides"

Intragastric conditions can affect the performance of solid dosage forms. For two cases, the ability of in vitro methods to forecast these effects was investigated: first, the ability of cholestyramine to sequester bile salts in the fed small intestine and, second, disintegration times of hard gelatin capsules. After incubating cholestyramine for 90 min in milk gradually digested with pepsin, the binding of taurocholates from fed state simulating intestinal fluid onto the resin became non-specific and the affinity constant was reduced from 220 l/mole (without prior incubation) to 60 l/mole.

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The objective of this study was to test various aspects of dissolution media simulating the intralumenal composition of the small intestine, including the suitability of the osmolality-adjusting agents and of the buffers, the substitution of crude sodium taurocholate (from ox bile) for pure sodium taurocholate and the substitution of partially hydrolysed soybean phosphatidylcholine for egg phosphatidylcholine. It was concluded that biorelevant media should contain sodium as the major cation species to better reflect the physiology. However, the use of non-physiologically relevant buffers is inevitable, especially for simulation of the fed state in the small intestine.

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The objectives of this study were twofold. First, to clarify the applicability of the similarity factor, f(2), the difference factor, f(1), and the Rescigno index, xi(i), in the comparison of cumulative drug vs. time data sets.

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