4.5 Article

FT-IR Analysis of Structural Changes in Ketoprofen Lysine Salt and KiOil Caused by a Pulsed Magnetic Field

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9100503

Keywords

magnetic field; diamagnetic pump; FT-IR; structural modification; CRPS; physical therapy

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This study investigated the structural changes induced by high-intensity, low-frequency magnetic fields on pharmacological molecules. Clinical validation was conducted on patients with lower back pain using diamagnetic therapy with topical ketoprofen or KiOil. The results showed that both ketoprofen and KiOil experienced structural modifications, and the clinical treatment demonstrated significant pain relief.
High-intensity, low-frequency magnetic fields (MFs) have been widely used in the treatment of diseases and in drug delivery, even though they could induce structural changes in pharmacological molecules. Morphological changes in ketoprofen and KiOil were investigated through Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR). Unsupervised principal component analysis was carried out for data clustering. Clinical validation on 22 patients with lower back pain was managed using diamagnetic therapy plus topical ketoprofen or KiOil. The Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) and Short-Form Health Survey 36 (SF-36) were used to evaluate clinical and functional response. Ketoprofen showed clear clustering among samples exposed to MF (4000-650 cm(-1)), and in the narrow frequency band (1675-1475 cm(-1)), results evidenced structural changes which involved other excipients than ketoprofen. KiOil has evidenced structural modifications in the subcomponents of the formulation. Clinical treatment with ketoprofen showed an average NRS of 7.77 +/- 2.25 before and an average NRS of 2.45 +/- 2.38 after MF treatment. There was a statistically significant reduction in NRS (p = 0.003) and in SF-36 (p < 0.005). Patients treated with KiOil showed an average NRS of 7.59 +/- 2.49 before treatment and an average NRS of 1.90 +/- 2.26 after treatment (p < 0.005). SF-36 showed statistical significance for all items except limitations due to emotional problems. A high-intensity pulsed magnetic field is an adjunct to topical treatment in patients with localized pain, and the effect of MF does not evidence significant effects on the molecules.

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