AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on enhancing the colloidal stability and effectiveness of two formulations of the anti-inflammatory drug indomethacin: nanoemulsions and microemulsions using noncovalent modifications with cationic surfactants.
  • The addition of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and its carbamate analogue improved the stability and prolonged the release of indomethacin, showing sustained drug release compared to the free drug.
  • In testing for anti-inflammatory activity in a rat model, the modified formulations with carbamate surfactants were more effective at reducing edema, with nanoemulsions performing better than microemulsions in certain cases.

Article Abstract

In this work, a noncovalent strategy was successfully used to modify colloidal stability andandefficacy of two amphiphilic formulations of the anti-inflammatory drug indomethacin. Namely, nanoemulsions and microemulsions based on oleic acid and nonionic surfactants have been produced and compared. The influence of cationic surfactants cetyltrimethylammonium bromide and its carbamate bearing analogue on the size characteristics, stability and ability to provide prolonged action of loaded drug indomethacin has been evaluated. Adding the positively charged molecules in the surface layer of nanoemulsions and microemulsions has shown the stability increase along with maintaining the size characteristics and homogeneity in time. Moreover, the carbamate modified analogue demonstrated beneficial behavior. Indomethacin loaded in microemulsions and nanoemulsions showed prolonged-release (10%-15% release for 5 h) compared to a free drug (complete release for 5 h). The rate of release of indomethacin from nanoemulsions was slightly higher than from microemulsions and insignificantly decreased with an increase in the concentration of the cationic surfactant. For carbamate surfactant nanocarrier loaded with fluorescence probe Nile Red, the ability to penetrate into the cell was supported by flow cytometry study and visualized by fluorescence microscopy.tests on anti-inflammatory activity of the systems demonstrated that the blood cell membrane stabilization increased in the case of modified microemulsion. The anti-inflammatory activity of the encapsulated drug was tested in rats using a carrageenan-induced edema model. Nanoemulsions without cationic surfactants appeared more efficient compared to microemulsions. Indomethacin emulsion formulations with carbamate surfactant added showed slower carrageenan-induced edema progression compared to unmodified compositions. Meanwhile, the edema completely disappeared upon treatment with emulsion loaded indomethacin after 4 h in the case of microemulsions versus 5 h in the case of nanoemulsions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/ac467dDOI Listing

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