4.5 Article

Effect of chemical enhancers and iontophoresis on thiocolchicoside permeation across rabbit and human skin in vitro

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES
Volume 93, Issue 10, Pages 2431-2438

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1002/jps.20152

Keywords

transdermal; permeation enhancers; iontophoresis; permeability; skin

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The aim of this work was to study the permeation of thiocolchicoside across the skin in vitro. The effect of the chemical enhancer lauric acid and the physical technique of iontophoresis was investigated. Permeation experiments were performed in vitro using rabbit ear skin as barrier. The effect of lauric acid at different concentrations (2% and 4%) and of the vehicle (water, ethanol, or ethanol/water) was investigated. The primary effect of lauric acid was on the partitioning parameter, whereas the diffusive parameter did not change significantly. When human epidermis was used, the permeation parameters were generally lower, although not significantly different from rabbit ear skin. The data obtained with full-thickness human skin indicate that, despite the hydrophilic nature of thiocolchicoside, the resistance to drug transport is not limited to the stratum corneum, but that the underlying dermal tissue can also contribute. Iontophoresis enhanced the flux of thiocolchicoside compared with the passive control. The mechanism by which iontophoresis enhanced thiocolchicoside transport across the skin was electroosmosis. The permeation of thiocolchicoside across the skin can be enhanced using chemical or physical penetration enhancers. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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