Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery

This study investigated transdermal drug delivery mechanisms of pectin and pectin-oleic acid (OA) gels and their effects on skin barrier treated by microwave. Hydrophilic pectin-sulphanilamide gels, with or without OA penetration enhancer, were subjected to drug release and skin permeation studies....

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Published in:Progress in Electromagnetics Research
Main Author: Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Electromagnetics Academy 2013
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84881296010&doi=10.2528%2fpier13061604&partnerID=40&md5=c8b726c730ac72f533faea7a20aeac92
id 2-s2.0-84881296010
spelling 2-s2.0-84881296010
Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
2013
Progress in Electromagnetics Research
141

10.2528/pier13061604
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84881296010&doi=10.2528%2fpier13061604&partnerID=40&md5=c8b726c730ac72f533faea7a20aeac92
This study investigated transdermal drug delivery mechanisms of pectin and pectin-oleic acid (OA) gels and their effects on skin barrier treated by microwave. Hydrophilic pectin-sulphanilamide gels, with or without OA penetration enhancer, were subjected to drug release and skin permeation studies. The skins were untreated or microwave-treated, and characterized by infrared spectroscopy, raman spectroscopy, thermal, electron microscopy and histology techniques. Unlike solid film, skin treatment by microwave at 2450 MHz demoted drug permeation especially from OA-rich pectin gel. The pectin-skin binding was facilitated by gel with freely soluble pectin molecules instead of solid film with entangled chains. It was promoted when microwave fluidized stratum corneum into structureless domains, or OA extracted endogenous lipid fraction and formed separate phases within intercellular lipid lamellae. This led to a remarkable decrease in transdermal drug permeation. Microwave-enhanced transdermal delivery must not be implemented with pectin gel. In skin treated by microwave, the penetration enhancer in gel can act as a permeation retardant.
Electromagnetics Academy
10704698
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
spellingShingle Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
author_facet Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
author_sort Khaizan A.N.; Wong T.W.
title Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
title_short Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
title_full Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
title_fullStr Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
title_full_unstemmed Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
title_sort Microwave: Effects and implications in transdermal drug delivery
publishDate 2013
container_title Progress in Electromagnetics Research
container_volume 141
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.2528/pier13061604
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84881296010&doi=10.2528%2fpier13061604&partnerID=40&md5=c8b726c730ac72f533faea7a20aeac92
description This study investigated transdermal drug delivery mechanisms of pectin and pectin-oleic acid (OA) gels and their effects on skin barrier treated by microwave. Hydrophilic pectin-sulphanilamide gels, with or without OA penetration enhancer, were subjected to drug release and skin permeation studies. The skins were untreated or microwave-treated, and characterized by infrared spectroscopy, raman spectroscopy, thermal, electron microscopy and histology techniques. Unlike solid film, skin treatment by microwave at 2450 MHz demoted drug permeation especially from OA-rich pectin gel. The pectin-skin binding was facilitated by gel with freely soluble pectin molecules instead of solid film with entangled chains. It was promoted when microwave fluidized stratum corneum into structureless domains, or OA extracted endogenous lipid fraction and formed separate phases within intercellular lipid lamellae. This led to a remarkable decrease in transdermal drug permeation. Microwave-enhanced transdermal delivery must not be implemented with pectin gel. In skin treated by microwave, the penetration enhancer in gel can act as a permeation retardant.
publisher Electromagnetics Academy
issn 10704698
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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