Nasal Dosage Forms Flashcards
1
Q
Advantages of nasal dosage forms
A
- Convenient administration (cavity capacity - 20 mL, surface area - 180cm2)
- useful area for drug absorption esp to drugs poorly absorbed orally
- absorption generally higher than oral
- rapid and efficient absorption -> highly vascularized
- No hepatic first pass effect
2
Q
Disadvantages of nasal dosage forms
A
- Degradation of enzymes
- mucociliary clearing/cleaning
- mucosal lining can be a diffusion barrier
3
Q
Absorption mechanism
A
- Hydrophilic compounds - through aq. channels between cells (pores between cells); molecular size < channel diameter
- Lipophylic compounds - partitioning across cell membranes (molecular size larger than channel diameter); slow rate compared to that of hydrophilic; pH is important
4
Q
Factors affecting nasal drug delivery
A
- Physiological (of the skin)
- speed of mucus flow
- change in physiological state
- atmospheric conditions in the nasal cavity - Dosage form
- Physicochemicals of the active drug and excipients
- Concentration of the active drug
- Density, viscosity, and pH of the formulation - Administration
- Size of dose
- Site of deposition
5
Q
How to improve drug availability
A
- Increase nasal residency time - use viscosity enhancers (e.g. methylcellulose carbopol), use of microspheres (e.g. insulin in microspheres)
- Use absorption enhancers - increase rate at which drugs pass through mucosa - alter structure of epithelial cells (e.g. surfactants, bile acids, cyclodextrins)
Ideal enhancer properties: produce effective increase in absorption in small quantities; dose does not produce permanent damage to cells; non-irritant, non-toxic, stable and compatible; no lag time for action - Structural modification e.g. use prodrugs - chemical modification of the drug molecular structure affect its physicochemical properties (salt/ester formation -> increase solubility) -> nasal absorption; chitosan enhance drug transport across mucosal membranes by increasing contact time between the drug and membrane, transiently opening the tight junctions between cells
6
Q
Types of nasal deliveries
A
- liquid (drops)
- sprays
- gels
- suspensions
- inhalants
- aerosol
- ointment
- sustained release: micro and nano encapsulated spheres/particles
7
Q
Formulations of nasal drops/solutions
A
- mainly aq. solutions
- antimicrobial preservatives e.g. benzalkonium chloride
- antioxidants e.g. butylated hydroxytoluene
- buffers
- salts to adjust tonicity (0.9% NaCl)
- solubilizing agents/cosolvents e.g. glycols
- viscosity enhancing agents e.g. methylcellulose
- absorption enhancers
=> not limited to these