4.5 Article

Optimization of microencapsulation of metronidazole in alginate microbeads for purpose of controlled release

Journal

POLYMER BULLETIN
Volume 79, Issue 10, Pages 8883-8903

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00289-021-03933-1

Keywords

Metronidazole; Alginate beads; Controlled release; Release model; Response surface methodology

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Response surface methodology was utilized to study the encapsulation of metronidazole in sodium alginate, resulting in spherical microbeads with specific characteristics. The optimum values for alginate concentration and drug to alginate ratio were determined to be 1.4% and 2.85, respectively.
To obtain the optimum conditions for encapsulation of metronidazole in sodium alginate, a response surface methodology (RSM) was used to find out the effect of independent variables (alginate concentration and drug to alginate ratio) on dependent variables including mean particle size, yield, drug loading, and encapsulation efficiency. Furthermore, the effect of alginate concentration on swelling behavior of microbeads was evaluated, and the mechanism of drug release was also studied. On the basis of the results, it can be declared that spherical microbeads with mean particle sizes of 443-665 mu m were obtained with process yields, drug loading, and encapsulation efficiencies of almost 79.5%, 54.9%, and 79.9%, respectively. The metronidazole release was found to be 68% in 7 h with a formulation containing the drug to polymer ratio of 2:1. The optimum values for alginate concentration and drug to alginate ratio were determined to be within 1.4% (w/v) and 2.85 (w/w), respectively. [GRAPHICS] .

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available