1. Carbopol-Based Gels for Nasal Delivery of Progesterone
- Author
-
Grace Rathnam, R. Ilavarasan, and N. Narayanan
- Subjects
Acrylic Resins ,Biological Availability ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Beta-Cyclodextrins ,Aquatic Science ,Polyvinyl alcohol ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Drug Discovery ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Administration, Intranasal ,Progesterone ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Drug Carriers ,Chromatography ,Calorimetry, Differential Scanning ,Ecology ,Cyclodextrin ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,beta-Cyclodextrins ,General Medicine ,Bioavailability ,Nasal Absorption ,Distilled water ,chemistry ,Area Under Curve ,Immunoassay ,Polyvinyls ,Rabbits ,Drug carrier ,Gels ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Research Article - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the nasal absorption of progesterone from carbopol-based nasal gels in rabbits. Progesterone nasal gels were prepared by dispersing carbopol 974 (1%, 1.5%, and 2%) in distilled water followed by addition of progesterone/progesterone-beta cyclodextrin complex dissolved in propylene glycol then neutralization. The potential use of beta cyclodextrin (CD) as nasal absorption enhancer by simple addition, as a physical mixture and as a complex with progesterone was investigated. The absolute bioavailability of progesterone from nasal gels in rabbits was studied by estimating the serum progesterone level by competitive solid-phase enzyme immunoassay in comparison to intravenous injection. The carbopol gel formulations produced a significant increase in bioavailability. CD complex promotes the nasal absorption of progesterone from carbopol gels as compared with gels where the CD is added by simple addition and gels which do not contain CD. This method of addition of CD as an inclusion complex in the gels could be considered as a preferred platform in nasal drug administration.
- Published
- 2008