Tuesday, 10 October 2023

A Study on the Treatment of Hyperkeratotic and Scaling Disorders Using Salicylic Acid Film Forming Gel with It’s Development and Characterization | Chapter 12 | Advanced Concepts in Pharmaceutical Research Vol. 1

 In order to overcome the disadvantages of traditional local formulation, the aim of this study is to design and distinguish a salicylic acid film-forming coagulate of hydrophilic polymers for the treatment of hyperkeratotic and climbing disorders that has wipe-off opposition, longer memory at the treatment ground, and is simple to spread and apply to the skin. Hyperkeratosis refers to the raised thickness of the layer corneum, the outer tier of the skin. It is most frequently on account of chronic material or chemical damage such as disagreement or the use of aggressive soaps but can further derive from never-ending inflammation or a side-effect of various drugs, including a destructive agent. Salicylic acid can be used topically to treat hyperkeratotic disorders, that are skin conditions from red, dry, fissured, and scaling skin. The film-making gel is qualified with HPMC E15, carbopol 934, propylene glycol, water, flammable liquid, and the drug. It is then optimised using 22 factorial designs and is characterised by allure physical traits, pH level, spreadability, drug content, rheological study, in vitro drug release, drying period, mechanical features of the film, and other determinants. Salicylic acid film-forming gel balance, skin irritancy, ex vivo permeation, and skin memory were also examined. For certain tests, every expression produces the expected results. The optimisation study found that viscosity increases and drug release decreases when HPMC E15 and carbopol 934 concentrations rise. The enhanced formulation had a stickiness of 47.6 ± 1.23 cp and a 90.23 ± 2.01% drug release. It is concluded that salicylic acid film-making gel for the situation of hyperkeratotic and scaling ailments is efficiently caused with hydrophilic polymers i.e., HPMC E15 and Carbopol 934 and that has wipe off fighting, longer memory at the site of situation, easy to spread on use and it forms a thin, transparent, protective, emollient and water dissolved film on skin within few notes to overcome the disadvantages of practice topical expression like ointment, lotion, gel i.e. need to massaging, poor devotion to the skin, easily wiped off on account of clothes, sweat, flows, poor permeability, ruined patient compliance.

Author(s) Details:

Rajashri N. Kausdikar,
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Appasaheb Birnale College of Pharmacy, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.

Manish S. Kondawar,
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Appasaheb Birnale College of Pharmacy, Sangli, Maharashtra, India.

Priyanka H. Jadhav,
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Dr. J. J. Magdum Pharmacy College, Jaysingpur, Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India.

Nayna M. Jaiswal,
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Nagpur), RTMNU, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.

Ramling D. Mali,
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Dr. J. J. Magdum Pharmacy College, Jaysingpur, Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/ACPR-V1/article/view/12151

No comments:

Post a Comment