Journal article

Systematic aging of degradable nanosuspension ameliorates vibrating-mesh nebulizer performance


Authors listDalla-Bona, Alexandra C.; Schmehl, Thomas; Gessler, Tobias; Seeger, Werner; Beck-Broichsitter, Moritz

Publication year2015

Pages1704-1709

JournalDrug Development and Industrial Pharmacy

Volume number41

Issue number10

ISSN0363-9045

eISSN1520-5762

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3109/03639045.2014.993399

PublisherTaylor and Francis Group


Abstract

Context: The process of vibrating-mesh nebulization is affected by sample physicochemical properties. Exemplary, electrolyte supplementation of diverse formulations facilitated the delivery of adequate aerosols for deep lung deposition.

Objective: This study addressed the impact of storage conditions of poly(lactide-co-glycolide) nanosuspension on aerosol properties when nebulized by the eFlow (R) rapid.

Materials and methods: First, purified nanosuspensions were supplemented with electrolytes (i.e. sodium chloride, lactic and glycolic acid). Second, the degradable nanoparticles (NP) were incubated at different temperatures (i.e. 4, 22 and 36 degrees C) for up to two weeks. The effect of formulation supplementation and storage on aerosol characteristics was studied by laser diffraction and correlated with the sample conductivity.

Results and discussion: Nebulization of purified nanosuspensions resulted in droplet diameters of >7.0 mu m. However, electrolyte supplementation and storage, which led to an increase in sample conductivity (>10-20 mu S/cm), were capable of providing smaller droplet diameters during vibrating-mesh nebulization (<= 5.0 mu m). No relevant change of NP properties (i.e. size, morphology, remaining mass and molecular weight of the employed polymer) was observed when incubated at 22 degrees C for two weeks.

Conclusion: Sample aging is an alternative to electrolyte supplementation in order to ameliorate the aerosol characteristics of degradable NP formulations when nebulized by vibrating-mesh technology.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleDalla-Bona, A., Schmehl, T., Gessler, T., Seeger, W. and Beck-Broichsitter, M. (2015) Systematic aging of degradable nanosuspension ameliorates vibrating-mesh nebulizer performance, Drug Development and Industrial Pharmacy, 41(10), pp. 1704-1709. https://doi.org/10.3109/03639045.2014.993399

APA Citation styleDalla-Bona, A., Schmehl, T., Gessler, T., Seeger, W., & Beck-Broichsitter, M. (2015). Systematic aging of degradable nanosuspension ameliorates vibrating-mesh nebulizer performance. Drug Development and Industrial Pharmacy. 41(10), 1704-1709. https://doi.org/10.3109/03639045.2014.993399



Keywords


AerosolAIR-JETBIODEGRADABLE NANOPARTICLESCONTROLLED PULMONARY DRUGFORMULATION ASPECTSHYDROLYTIC DEGRADATIONpoly(lactide-co-glycolide)pulmonary drug deliveryvibrating-mesh nebulizer

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:35