TY - JOUR
T1 - Phospholipids-embedded fully dilutable liquid nanostructures. Part 2
T2 - The role of sodium diclofenac
AU - Amsalem, Orit
AU - Aserin, Abraham
AU - Garti, Nissim
PY - 2010/12
Y1 - 2010/12
N2 - Complex pseudo-ternary phase diagrams based on sucrose monolaurate (SE), propylene glycol (PG), and phosphatidylcholine (PC) as the " surfactant phase" ; triacetin (TA) and decaglycerol ester (10G1CC) as the " oil phase" ; and water as the aqueous phase were constructed, into which we solubilized the water-insoluble drug (sodium diclofenac, Na-DFC). In our previous study we demonstrated that the solubilization of Na-DFC in the oil. +. surfactant phases (prior to diluting it with water), was 90-fold greater than its dissolution in water, and that the system was pH-dependent. The greatest Na-DFC solubilization capacity was obtained at pH 7.2.In this study we examined the effect of the solubilization of Na-DFC in a phosphatidylcholine system using DLS, viscosity, electrical conductivity, SAXS, SD-NMR, and cryo-TEM measurements. It was found that: (1) the system remains micellar after aqueous dilution but with greater polydispersity and greater variety of shapes. We concluded that the structures in the absence of water (but in the presence of PG) were of direct spherical micelles (∼4. nm) mixed with elongated cylindrical micelles (12-140. nm); (2) the aqueous dilution causes fragmentation of the cylinders into smaller spherical micelles; (3) solubilization of Na-DFC behaving like a kosmotropic agent or " structure maker" yields mostly spherical swollen micelles and more ordered systems than in its absence; and (4) Na-DFC is solubilized at the interface of the micelles without swelling the droplets.
AB - Complex pseudo-ternary phase diagrams based on sucrose monolaurate (SE), propylene glycol (PG), and phosphatidylcholine (PC) as the " surfactant phase" ; triacetin (TA) and decaglycerol ester (10G1CC) as the " oil phase" ; and water as the aqueous phase were constructed, into which we solubilized the water-insoluble drug (sodium diclofenac, Na-DFC). In our previous study we demonstrated that the solubilization of Na-DFC in the oil. +. surfactant phases (prior to diluting it with water), was 90-fold greater than its dissolution in water, and that the system was pH-dependent. The greatest Na-DFC solubilization capacity was obtained at pH 7.2.In this study we examined the effect of the solubilization of Na-DFC in a phosphatidylcholine system using DLS, viscosity, electrical conductivity, SAXS, SD-NMR, and cryo-TEM measurements. It was found that: (1) the system remains micellar after aqueous dilution but with greater polydispersity and greater variety of shapes. We concluded that the structures in the absence of water (but in the presence of PG) were of direct spherical micelles (∼4. nm) mixed with elongated cylindrical micelles (12-140. nm); (2) the aqueous dilution causes fragmentation of the cylinders into smaller spherical micelles; (3) solubilization of Na-DFC behaving like a kosmotropic agent or " structure maker" yields mostly spherical swollen micelles and more ordered systems than in its absence; and (4) Na-DFC is solubilized at the interface of the micelles without swelling the droplets.
KW - Elongated micelles
KW - Micellar systems
KW - Phospholipids
KW - Polyglycerol ester
KW - Sodium diclofenac
KW - Solubilization
KW - Sucrose ester
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77956651131&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2010.07.032
DO - 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2010.07.032
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C2 - 20708909
AN - SCOPUS:77956651131
SN - 0927-7765
VL - 81
SP - 422
EP - 429
JO - Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
JF - Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
IS - 2
ER -