4.4 Article

Rheological behavior of nasal sprays in shear and extension

Journal

DRUG DEVELOPMENT AND INDUSTRIAL PHARMACY
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 975-983

Publisher

MARCEL DEKKER INC
DOI: 10.1081/DDC-100101325

Keywords

droplet evolution; extensional flow; nasal spray; shear thinning; suspension; thixotropy

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The rheological profiles of commercial corticosteroid nasal spray suspensions (Beconase(R), Nasacort(R), Flixonase(R), and Nasonex(R)) were compared using shear and extensional techniques. Thixotropy/shear thinning was investigated (Carri-Med CSL100, concentric cylinder geometry) by (a) the generation of flow curves at law (100 sec(-1)) and high (1200 sec(-1)) maximum shear rates and (b) determination of equilibrium shear viscosities at constant shear rates of 10 sec(-1), 100 sec(-1), or 1200 sec(-1). Extensional properties, on which droplet breakup and size depend, were examined using digital camera photography of droplet evolution and the length any trailing filament formed when the suspension was extruded from a 10-ml syringe at 500 mu l/min. All the nasal suspensions were shear thinning and were also thixotropic to varying degrees. The absence of significant thixotropic recovery at short times (5 min) for all the sprays implies that thixotropy is not necessarily the controlling factor for prolonged residence of the spray in the nasal cavity, but rather that it is the high viscosities present in all four sprays, even after structure breakdown. Preliminary extensional flow delta identified differences among the four sprays, with extensional filament lengths increasing in the same rank order as the lowest shear rate (10 sec(-1)) equilibrium viscosities.

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