FORMULATION AND EVALUATION OF TRANSDERMAL PATCHES OF BUCLIZINE DIHYDROCHLORIDE
Krishna Rajesh Chhoda* and Sagar Suresh Jadkar
.
Abstract
The pharmaceutical industry has greatly benefited from transdermal
medication administration. It is a patch that releases a specified dosage
of medicine into the bloodstream through the skin. The fundamental
benefit of transdermal medication administration is that it bypasses the
gastrointestinal tract and the liver's first-pass effect. This allows drugs
to be delivered directly into the systemic circulation. One benefit of
transdermal drug administration over other methods is that the patch
permits a controlled flow of the medication into the patient, often
through a porous membrane that covers or melts a drug reservoir.
Body heat is used to embed thin layers of medication in a binder.
Using the solvent evaporation method, the current study aimed to create buclizine
dihydrochloride transdermal films and assess physicochemical factors like thickness, weight
change, moisture absorption, moisture content, folding strength, and drug content value. Five
transdermal patches were created utilising various methyl cellulose concentrations. It was
determined that the patch's thickness, weight homogeneity, and folding strength all rose as
the polymer concentration did. With increasing polymer concentration, both the amount of
moisture and the percentage of moisture absorption decreased.
Keywords: Transdermal Patches, Skin, Buclizine Dihydrochloride, Ethyl cellulose.
[Full Text Article]