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        The electrostability and electrically assisted delivery of an organophosphate pretreatment (physostigmine) across human skin in vitro

        Author
        Rowland, C. A.
        Chilcott, Robert
        Attention
        2299/10857
        Abstract
        Physostigmine is a tertiary carbamate that is utilised as a pretreatment against organophosphate intoxication. Oral delivery of physostigmine is not practical due to high first pass metabolism and short Elimination half life. Transdermal administration of physostigmine may circumvent such problems. The aim of this study was to assess the electrostability of physostigmine and the feasibility of electrically assisted transdermal drug delivery of physostigmine through isolated human skin in vitro. Buffered solutions of physostigmine (free base, salicylate and sulphate) were electrostable under conditions of iontophoresis and electroporation as measured by HPLC, although instability of the chloridised silver electrodes was observed. Physostigmine sulphate was chosen for further study as it appeared to prevent degradation of thr electrodes. Under conditions of iontophoresis (0.8 mA cm(-2), applied for 5- or 2.5-min durations for a maximum period of 45 min over 8 h), the total quantity of physostigmine sulphate that penetrated was 6.5+/-2.3% and 3.9+/-1.7% (pH 5.0 and pH 5.5) of the total applied dose (2 mg). Physostigmine did not penetrate the skin when electroporated at a frequency of 0.1 Hz or 10 Hz (100 V, I ms pulse width, duration 1 s, repetition 5-10 s), but significant amounts were delivered at a frequency of 100 Hz, being 11.3 +/- 2.9% and 5.8 +/- 2.5% of the applied dose (pH 5.0 and pH 5.5, respectively). These data indicate that iontophoretic and electroporative drug delivery of physostigmine sulphate was buffer-dependent. an effect tentatively attributed to a combination of co-ion competition, mono/di-cation ratio and applied charge effects. Crown copyright (C) 2000 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
        Publication date
        2000-08-10
        Published in
        Journal of Controlled Release
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/10857
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