Publications by authors named "Sokoloski T"

Gravimetric water sorption experiments were performed to study the crystallization behavior of amorphous spray-dried lactose over a wide range of temperature and humidity conditions. Experiments performed at 25 degrees C between 48 and 60% relative humidity (RH) showed that the onset time to crystallization increased dramatically with decreasing humidity. At 55% RH and above, crystallization occurred in a single detectable step, while below a two-step process was observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The integral heat of adsorption of water vapor on sodium benzoate samples was determined at various partial vapor pressures using a heat conduction microcalorimeter. An equation is presented to describe the calorimetric integral heat response (mJ/g of solid) as a function of relative humidity. This equation, although similar in principle to the well-known BET equation, relates the heat evolved (rather than volume or mass of gas adsorbed) upon adsorption to the partial pressure of the gas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The heat of precipitation of dl-pseudoephedrine was determined by direct calorimetry using a Tronac isoperibolic calorimeter. The precipitation of dl-pseudoephedrine was induced by mixing aqueous solutions of the two enantiomers, namely, d- and l-pseudoephedrine, directly in the calorimeter. The molar heat of precipitation of dl-pseudoephedrine was -2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effect of water on the relaxation behavior below the glass transition temperature (beta-relaxation) of an amorphous powder, poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP, MW 30,000), was studied by subjecting the sample to dielectric analysis in the frequency range from 20 Hz to 20 kHz. The material stored at 0% relative humidity (RH) (containing 0.05% w/w H2O) exhibited a frequency dependent second-order beta-relaxation (T beta = -56 degrees C at 500 Hz).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The influence of co-solvents on the in-vitro percutaneous penetration of indomethacin from gel systems was studied using a simplex lattice experimental design. Gel formulations were prepared by gelling the vehicle mixture of water, either alcohol or isopropanol and either propylene glycol or PEG 400 with 1% w/w Carbomer 940. Hairless mouse skin was employed as the barrier in a Franz-type diffusion cell.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Controlled release matrix tablets for diclofenac sodium were developed in this study. Five matrix-tablet formulations were prepared by granulating two viscosity grades of HPMC (hydroxylpropylmethylcellulose) in varying ratios with water in the planetary mixer. The in-vitro dissolution tests indicate that all five matrix formulations prolong the release of diclofenac sodium.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Second derivative infrared (IR) spectroscopy can be used as a quick, easy, reproducible, cost-effective, non-destructive tool by which to evaluate the purity and structural integrity of samples of water-soluble proteins from a variety of sources. For this study, second derivative IR spectra were collected at ambient conditions for aqueous (D2O) solutions of seven different commercial samples of the same enzyme, porcine pancreatic elastase (2.0 to 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A general titration calorimetry method is described that can be used to determine the affinity of tight binding interactions with proteins. The method is based on the thermodynamic linkage between ligand binding and coupled protonation reactions. The protons linked to a given ligand-binding reaction are measured by titration calorimetry, and integration of the resulting data set yields the pH dependence of the binding affinity based on thermodynamic relationships developed elsewhere.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The influence of cosolovents on the in-vitro percutaneous penetration of diclofenac sodium from a gel system was studied using a simplex lattice experimental design. Gel formulations were prepared by gelling the vehicle mixture of water, alcohol and propylene glycol with Carbomer 940. The synthetic membrane Durapore and hairless mouse skin were employed as barriers in a Franz-type diffusion cell.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reaction conditions for the covalent bonding of 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine to serum albumin microbeads by means of a water-soluble carbodiimide were studied. Optimum coupling of dFUR to the microbeads occurred when pure water was used as solvent. There was no significant difference in the bonding efficiency for microbeads prepared at different stirring speeds, and there was a limit to the amount of dFUR that could be bound with increasing reaction time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fibrinogen is the natural substrate for thrombin, the final proteolytic enzyme of the blood coagulation cascade. Following reaction with thrombin, fibrinogen is converted into fibrin monomers which then spontaneously polymerize into fibrin threads forming the fibrin matrix. This biochemical reaction between fibrinogen and thrombin has been used to produce natural, biodegradable, biocompatible systems for sustained drug delivery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glutaraldehyde treatment of dexamethasone-containing cylindrical fibrin gels (obtained by the thrombin-induced polymerization of fibrinogen in the presence of the drug) causes cross-linking of the gels and modification of the pore structure. The effect on the release of dexamethasone was assessed by measuring the diffusion coefficient of the drug across treated and untreated gels; diffusion across the treated gels was significantly decreased as compared with untreated gels, but was little affected by the concentration of glutaraldehyde used in the treatment. In biodegradable tests, the treated gels (all concentrations of glutaraldehyde) were resistant to digestion even in the presence of plasmin, but untreated gels were digested, and the digestion rate was accelerated by plasmin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chinese hamster ovarian (CHO) cells in culture were used to evaluate the relative antiproliferative potential of drugs. These agents have been used to improve the clinical response after glaucoma filtering surgery. The following drugs were evaluated: 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) as the benchmark, 5-fluorouridine (FUR), 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FUDR), 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine (DFUR), bleomycin, and cytarabine (ARA-C).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

After alkylation of a fraction of the total alpha-adrenoreceptors by phenoxybenzamine in rat vas deferens, the dissociation constants of (-)- and (+)-epinephrine in functional studies were 7 X 10(-7) M and 2 X 10(-5) M, respectively. In the adrenoreceptor-containing tissue fraction, when 3H-labeled WB4101 was used as the interacting ligand, for each enantiomer two affinity sites were found. Only the low-affinity dissociation constant for each isomer correlates with the constant obtained from the functional studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effect of cardiopulmonary bypass on the clearance of nitroglycerin (NTG) was studied in seven patients scheduled for coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Intravenous NTG was administered through nonadsorbing tubing at a starting dosage of 5-10 micrograms/min and was adjusted as needed. Blood samples were obtained from the radial artery and antecubital vein before bypass and from the arterial outlet of the oxygenator during bypass at least 30 minutes apart during a constant dosage or at least 30 minutes after a dosage change.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is a need to identify suitable blends of solvents to dissolve drugs. Empirical approaches, such as trial-and-error and response surface, require several solubility measurements. In this study the UNIFAC method was used to predict solubility in highly nonideal multicomponent systems in which only the solute enthalpy of fusion and melting point must by measured.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mixture response-surface methodology can be used as a technique to predict solubility in mixed solvent systems. The present report shows that if the intent is to predict solubility in nonideal solutions, mixture response-surface methodology is a better technique than one which assumes a particular mechanism to hold true. This is demonstrated by comparing the predictive ability of the mixture response-surface model with that of an extended Hildebrand approach to nonideal solutions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The pigment cell dependent accumulation of 3H(-)-norepinephrine (1 mumol/l) was studied in rabbit irides. Albino irides served as controls. Neuronal uptake, deamination and O-methylation of 3H(-)-norepinephrine were reduced by desipramine, pargyline and U-0521, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nitroglycerin is rapidly lost from solution when incubated with red blood cells or whole blood. The assumption that the loss is enzymatic in nature may not be true, since no major metabolite is detected during this incubation. Explanation on the basis of a chemical reaction is also difficult, since the products of the chemical hydrolysis of nitroglycerin are the same as the metabolic products.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of in vitro nitroglycerin tolerance and methylene blue pretreatment on the ability of nitroglycerin and nitroprusside to promote relaxation and tissue accumulation of cyclic GMP were examined in the carbachol-contracted longitudinal smooth muscle of the guinea-pig ileum. Nitroglycerin and nitroprusside produced concentration-dependent increases in cyclic GMP levels. However, only nitroglycerin increased cyclic GMP levels before the onset of relaxation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An in vitro model of a cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) circuit using a bubble oxygenator was developed to assess the potential of this system to extract nitroglycerin (NTG). A NTG solution (100 ng/ml) was circulated through a CPB circuit at 5 L/min for 60 min. Samples obtained for NTG analysis revealed a significant loss of drug to the circuit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF