Ointment and Pastes Part 3 Flashcards
A) What are pastes?
B) How are they different from ointments?
C) List some of the properties of pastes
A)
Semi-solid preparations for application to skin or mucous membranes. Usually consist of a high proportion of finely powdered medicaments dispersed in a base.
B)
- Pastes are ointments which contain a much higher proportion (20-50%) of fine powders
- Higher powder content –> allows evaporation + powders can absorb exudate when with hydrocarbon base
- Stiff consistency – much stiffer than ointments. Viscosity (dilatant flow) makes application difficult
C)
- Applied to small areas of skin –> areas of disease.
- Mostly for local effect
- Intended for prolonged contact
- Adhere well to skin –> protect and soothe inflamed surfaces
- Emollient + provides a protective barrier
- Difficult to apply and cosmetically unappealing
- Cant use on scalp
What are the target areas/ regions for pastes?
- Skin Surface: eg Nappy Mate Paste® - protection of nappy area
- Mucuous membrane: Kenalog in Orabase® - treatment of mouth ulcers
- Epidermis: Dithranol Paste APF – psoriasis; Upton’s Paste APF - warts
- Deeper layers of skin/Appendages: Magnesium Sulphate Paste APF13 = Magnoplasm® - drawing out boils (osmotic effect)
A) Compare the bases used in pastes and ointments (attached image)
B) Are the same bases used for ointments and pastes
A) see attached
B)
- Same types of bases used for both, but absorption bases not used in pastes
- High powder content (eg 60%) allows use of liquids (eg liquid paraffin) alone as bases for pastes
- Gels may be used as bases for pastes
Ointment bases –> semi-solid
Disucss the use of hydrocarbon bases in pastes? Give some examples
-
Liquid paraffin
* Liquid bases can be used due to the high content of powders.
Eg Compound Aluminium Paste BP (Baltimore Paste)
> Applied thickly around a fistula or sinus to protect the surrounding skin from the discharge
> Presence of high proportion of powders –> not occlusive
- Soft Paraffin
Examples
- Compound Zinc Paste BP (zinc Paste) –> Astringent and Protective
- Zinc and Salicylic Acid Paste BP (keratolytic in treatment of eczema and psoraisis)
- Coal Tar Paste BP (treatment of ecezema and psoriasis)
- Dithranol Paste APF and BP (treatment of psoriasis)
For water miscible bases used in pastes, provide some examples and their uses
- Emulsifying Wax
- Emulsifying wax combined with YSP –> Emulsifying wax aids the disperion of coal tar and facilitates its removal from skin
- Emulsifying Wax in Emulsifying Ointment –> Keratolytic, exfoliative, antipruritic - may be used in the treatment of acne and seborrhoea dermatitis
- Glycerol
- Magnesium Sulphate Paste BPC –> Drawing agent to treat boils and carbuncles. This is due to the powerful osmotic effect of glycerol and the salt.
- Trichloracetic Acid Paste APF –> TCA very caustic, caustic agent for the treatment of warts
For water soluble used in pastes, provide some examples and their uses
1) Macrogols
* Unofficial dental paste formulations
2) Gel bases
- Gelatin ( Sodium Carboxymethylcellulose/pectin/gelatin in Plastibase (Orabase®) - water soluble base that adheres to mucous membranes used to treat oral conditions
- Eg Kenalog in Orabase® - contains Triamcinolone – treatment of mouth ulcers
Decscribe what the therapeutic ingredients below do
A) Protectants
B) Keratolytics
C) Corticosteroids
D) Drawing Agents
E) Antiproliferative
A)
- Protect skin from harmful stimuli eg Zinc Oxide
B)
- Agents that reduce the thickness of the stratum corneum by loosening keratin eg Salicylic Acid
C)
- Agents that suppress inflammation eg Triamcinolone
D)
- Create osmotic effect to draw moisture from deeper levels of skin eg Magnesium Sulfate, Glycerol
E)
- Reduce the thickness of the epithelium eg Coal Tar
A) How are pastes prepared?
B) How are they packaged and stored?
A)
- Fusion - melt base ingredients together and cool (with stirring) to room temperature (unless base is a liquid)
- Trituration of powdered ingredients (in a mortar or on slab)
- Stirring into melted base if very high concentration (50%) of powders
B)
- Packaged in glass or plastic jars or collapsible tubes
- Pastes containing water or volatile ingredients should be supplied in wellclosed containers
- BP/APF specifies storage below 25ºC