Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement

Herbal supplements often incorporate herb mixtures to prevent clumping and to control the release of medicinal compounds and mask bitter tastes. Medium solution and time affected the release rate of active components. In this study, active compounds from herbal supplements were examined for their re...

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Published in:Research Journal of Biotechnology
Main Author: Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: World Research Association 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85134405912&doi=10.25303%2f1706rjbt2040219&partnerID=40&md5=b1bb83738291df2c701b9bc230da626f
id 2-s2.0-85134405912
spelling 2-s2.0-85134405912
Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
2022
Research Journal of Biotechnology
17
6
10.25303/1706rjbt2040219
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85134405912&doi=10.25303%2f1706rjbt2040219&partnerID=40&md5=b1bb83738291df2c701b9bc230da626f
Herbal supplements often incorporate herb mixtures to prevent clumping and to control the release of medicinal compounds and mask bitter tastes. Medium solution and time affected the release rate of active components. In this study, active compounds from herbal supplements were examined for their release behavior in different media [0.1 M HCl, 30% EtOH, acetate buffer (pH 4.8) and phosphate buffer pH 6.3] at different times upon exposure to different media using a dissolution equipment. An aliquot was collected every 15 minutes for a total of 120 minutes. Analyses of reverse-phase HPLC were used to determine the amount of gallic acid and eurycomanone present in the samples. Reference standards for the study were Kacip Fatimah (KV) and Tongkat Ali (TS). The results demonstrate that the release behaviour of all samples varied, however samples labelled KA and TA displayed the maximum release rate of galic acid and eurycomanone in an acidic medium (0.1 M HCl) at 30 minutes. Meanwhile, the sample labelled as TC had the lowest rate of Eurycomanone emission. The highest gallic acid concentration was found in sample KA and the highest Eurycomanone level was found in sample TA. For both groups ranging from 20 to 60 minutes, the acidic media demonstrated the best results for assessing the release behavior of active components. Data on correlations showed a monotone relationship. © 2022 World Research Association. All rights reserved.
World Research Association
9736263
English
Article

author Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
spellingShingle Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
author_facet Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
author_sort Noorazwani Z.; Nazurah M.A.; Arief M.A.M.E.; Khetiswari G.; Norulfairuz A.Z.D.
title Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
title_short Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
title_full Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
title_fullStr Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
title_full_unstemmed Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
title_sort Comparative studies on the release behaviours of gallic acid and eurycomanone as active ingredients in herbal supplement
publishDate 2022
container_title Research Journal of Biotechnology
container_volume 17
container_issue 6
doi_str_mv 10.25303/1706rjbt2040219
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85134405912&doi=10.25303%2f1706rjbt2040219&partnerID=40&md5=b1bb83738291df2c701b9bc230da626f
description Herbal supplements often incorporate herb mixtures to prevent clumping and to control the release of medicinal compounds and mask bitter tastes. Medium solution and time affected the release rate of active components. In this study, active compounds from herbal supplements were examined for their release behavior in different media [0.1 M HCl, 30% EtOH, acetate buffer (pH 4.8) and phosphate buffer pH 6.3] at different times upon exposure to different media using a dissolution equipment. An aliquot was collected every 15 minutes for a total of 120 minutes. Analyses of reverse-phase HPLC were used to determine the amount of gallic acid and eurycomanone present in the samples. Reference standards for the study were Kacip Fatimah (KV) and Tongkat Ali (TS). The results demonstrate that the release behaviour of all samples varied, however samples labelled KA and TA displayed the maximum release rate of galic acid and eurycomanone in an acidic medium (0.1 M HCl) at 30 minutes. Meanwhile, the sample labelled as TC had the lowest rate of Eurycomanone emission. The highest gallic acid concentration was found in sample KA and the highest Eurycomanone level was found in sample TA. For both groups ranging from 20 to 60 minutes, the acidic media demonstrated the best results for assessing the release behavior of active components. Data on correlations showed a monotone relationship. © 2022 World Research Association. All rights reserved.
publisher World Research Association
issn 9736263
language English
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