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Formation of microcapsules of medicines by the rapid expansion of a supercritical solution with a nonsolvent

78

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34

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2003

Year

Abstract

Abstract The rapid expansion from a supercritical solution with a nonsolvent (RESS‐N) was applied to the formation of polymeric microcapsules containing medicines such as p ‐acetamidophenol, acetylsalicylic acid, 1,3‐dimethylxanthine, flavone, and 3‐hydroxyflavone. A suspension of medicine in carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) containing a cosolvent and dissolved polymer was sprayed through a nozzle to atmospheric pressure. The pre‐expansion pressure was 10–25 MPa, and the temperature was 308–333 K. The polymers were poly( L ‐lactic acid) (molecular weight = 5000), poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG; PEG4000, molecular weight = 3000; PEG6000, molecular weight = 7500; and PEG20000, molecular weight = 20,000), poly(methyl methacrylate) (molecular weight = 15,000), ethyl cellulose (molecular weight = 5000), and PEG–poly(propylene glycol)–PEG triblock copolymer (molecular weight = 13,000). The solubilities of the polymers as coating materials and these medicines as core substance were very low in CO 2 . However, the solubilities of these polymers in CO 2 significantly increased with the addition of low molecular weight alcohols as cosolvents. After RESS‐N, polymeric microcapsules were formed according to the precipitation of the polymer caused by a decrease in the solvent power of CO 2 . This method offered three advantages: (1) enough of the coating polymers, which were insoluble in pure CO 2 , dissolved; (2) the microparticles of the medicine were encapsulated without adhesion between the particles because a nonsolvent was used as a cosolvent and the cosolvent remaining in the mixture was removed by the gasification of CO 2 ; and (3) the polymer‐coating thickness was controlled with changes in the feed composition of the polymer for drug delivery. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 89: 742–752, 2003

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