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A novel multifunctional pharmaceutical excipient: modification of the permeability of starch by processing with magnesium silicate.
Int J Pharm. 2011 Jun 15; 411(1-2):18-26.IJ

Abstract

A directly compressible excipient has been developed by co-processing starch with magnesium silicate. The foregoing was achieved either by co-precipitation of magnesium silicate onto different types of starch or by dry granulation of maize starch with magnesium silicate. A variety of techniques (permeability, water retention/swelling, compression analysis, scanning electron microscopy, tensile strength and disintegration/dissolution studies) were used to characterize these systems. The permeability of the formulations produced using the two methods was evaluated experimentally using Darcy's permeability law. Magnesium silicate, as an anti-adhering agent, increases the permeability of both maize and partially pregelatinized starch, resulting in compacts of high mechanical strength, short disintegration time and low lubricant sensitivity. Such advantages are evident when the properties of the physical mixture of maize starch with magnesium silicate are compared with the co-precipitation and dry granulation techniques. Formulation with this novel excipient system, using paracetamol as a model drug, indicated its suitability as a single multifunctional excipient.

Authors+Show Affiliations

The Jordanian Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Co, PO Box 94, Naor 11710, Jordan.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21419206

Citation

Rashid, Iyad, et al. "A Novel Multifunctional Pharmaceutical Excipient: Modification of the Permeability of Starch By Processing With Magnesium Silicate." International Journal of Pharmaceutics, vol. 411, no. 1-2, 2011, pp. 18-26.
Rashid I, Al-Remawi M, Leharne SA, et al. A novel multifunctional pharmaceutical excipient: modification of the permeability of starch by processing with magnesium silicate. Int J Pharm. 2011;411(1-2):18-26.
Rashid, I., Al-Remawi, M., Leharne, S. A., Chowdhry, B. Z., & Badwan, A. (2011). A novel multifunctional pharmaceutical excipient: modification of the permeability of starch by processing with magnesium silicate. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 411(1-2), 18-26. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2011.03.011
Rashid I, et al. A Novel Multifunctional Pharmaceutical Excipient: Modification of the Permeability of Starch By Processing With Magnesium Silicate. Int J Pharm. 2011 Jun 15;411(1-2):18-26. PubMed PMID: 21419206.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A novel multifunctional pharmaceutical excipient: modification of the permeability of starch by processing with magnesium silicate. AU - Rashid,Iyad, AU - Al-Remawi,Mayyas, AU - Leharne,Stephen A, AU - Chowdhry,Babur Z, AU - Badwan,Adnan, Y1 - 2011/03/16/ PY - 2011/01/04/received PY - 2011/03/01/revised PY - 2011/03/09/accepted PY - 2011/3/23/entrez PY - 2011/3/23/pubmed PY - 2012/1/11/medline SP - 18 EP - 26 JF - International journal of pharmaceutics JO - Int J Pharm VL - 411 IS - 1-2 N2 - A directly compressible excipient has been developed by co-processing starch with magnesium silicate. The foregoing was achieved either by co-precipitation of magnesium silicate onto different types of starch or by dry granulation of maize starch with magnesium silicate. A variety of techniques (permeability, water retention/swelling, compression analysis, scanning electron microscopy, tensile strength and disintegration/dissolution studies) were used to characterize these systems. The permeability of the formulations produced using the two methods was evaluated experimentally using Darcy's permeability law. Magnesium silicate, as an anti-adhering agent, increases the permeability of both maize and partially pregelatinized starch, resulting in compacts of high mechanical strength, short disintegration time and low lubricant sensitivity. Such advantages are evident when the properties of the physical mixture of maize starch with magnesium silicate are compared with the co-precipitation and dry granulation techniques. Formulation with this novel excipient system, using paracetamol as a model drug, indicated its suitability as a single multifunctional excipient. SN - 1873-3476 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21419206/A_novel_multifunctional_pharmaceutical_excipient:_modification_of_the_permeability_of_starch_by_processing_with_magnesium_silicate_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0378-5173(11)00213-4 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -