scholarly journals Advances in Oral Drug Delivery

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed S. Alqahtani ◽  
Mohsin Kazi ◽  
Mohammad A. Alsenaidy ◽  
Muhammad Z. Ahmad

The oral route is the most common route for drug administration. It is the most preferred route, due to its advantages, such as non-invasiveness, patient compliance and convenience of drug administration. Various factors govern oral drug absorption including drug solubility, mucosal permeability, and stability in the gastrointestinal tract environment. Attempts to overcome these factors have focused on understanding the physicochemical, biochemical, metabolic and biological barriers which limit the overall drug bioavailability. Different pharmaceutical technologies and drug delivery systems including nanocarriers, micelles, cyclodextrins and lipid-based carriers have been explored to enhance oral drug absorption. To this end, this review will discuss the physiological, and pharmaceutical barriers influencing drug bioavailability for the oral route of administration, as well as the conventional and novel drug delivery strategies. The challenges and development aspects of pediatric formulations will also be addressed.

Scientifica ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mayank Sharma ◽  
Rajesh Sharma ◽  
Dinesh Kumar Jain

Oral administration is the most convenient route among various routes of drug delivery as it offers high patient compliance. However, the poor aqueous solubility and poor enzymatic/metabolic stability of drugs are major limitations in successful oral drug delivery. There are several approaches to improve problems related to hydrophobic drugs. Among various approaches, nanotechnology based drug delivery system has potential to overcome the challenges associated with the oral route of administration. Novel drug delivery systems are available in many areas of medicine. The application of these systems in the treatment of hypertension continues to broaden. The present review focuses on various nanocarriers available in oral drug administration for improving solubility profile, dissolution, and consequently bioavailability of hydrophobic antihypertensive drugs.


Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 887
Author(s):  
Nutthapoom Pathomthongtaweechai ◽  
Chatchai Muanprasat

The small intestine provides the major site for the absorption of numerous orally administered drugs. However, before reaching to the systemic circulation to exert beneficial pharmacological activities, the oral drug delivery is hindered by poor absorption/metabolic instability of the drugs in gastrointestinal (GI) tract and the presence of the mucus layer overlying intestinal epithelium. Therefore, a polymeric drug delivery system has emerged as a robust approach to enhance oral drug bioavailability and intestinal drug absorption. Chitosan, a cationic polymer derived from chitin, and its derivatives have received remarkable attention to serve as a promising drug carrier, chiefly owing to their versatile, biocompatible, biodegradable, and non-toxic properties. Several types of chitosan-based drug delivery systems have been developed, including chemical modification, conjugates, capsules, and hybrids. They have been shown to be effective in improving intestinal assimilation of several types of drugs, e.g., antidiabetic, anticancer, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory drugs. In this review, the physiological challenges affecting intestinal drug absorption and the effects of chitosan on those parameters impacting on oral bioavailability are summarized. More appreciably, types of chitosan-based nanomaterials enhancing intestinal drug absorption and their mechanisms, as well as potential applications in diabetes, cancers, infections, and inflammation, are highlighted. The future perspective of chitosan applications is also discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alla Krasnoshtanova ◽  
Anastasiya Bezyeva

"The oral route of drug inclusion is the most convenient for the patient. In addition to ease of use, this method of drug inclusion has such advantages as non-invasiveness of inclusion, absence of complications during injection; comparative safety for the organism due to the passage of the active substance and auxiliary compounds through the gastrointestinal tract; the possibility of introducing larger doses of the drug at one time. However, despite the obvious advantages, the oral route of inclusion has a number of significant disadvantages that significantly limit its use for a number of drugs. Among them are: relatively slow therapeutic action of the drug with this route of inclusion; the aggressive effect of a number of drugs (for example, antibiotics) on the gastrointestinal tract; low bioavailability of a number of substances (especially high molecular weight hydrophilic compounds), caused by poor permeability of the intestinal epithelium for hydrophilic and large molecules, as well as enzymatic and chemical degradation of the active substance in the gastrointestinal tract. There are various approaches used in the development of oral drug delivery systems. In particular, for the targeted delivery of drugs, it is proposed to use nano- and microcapsules with mucoadhesive properties. Among the polymers used for the synthesis of these microparticles, it is preferable to use pH-dependent, gelable biopolymers that change their structure depending on the acidity of the environment. Microcapsules obtained from compounds with the above properties are capable of protecting the active substance (or from the active substance) in the stomach environment and ensuring its release in the intestine. These properties are possessed by such polysaccharides as alginate, pectin, carrageenan, xylan, etc. The listed biopolymers are non-toxic, biocompatible, and biodegradable, which makes microparticles containing these polysaccharides promising as oral drug delivery systems. To impart mucoadhesive properties to nanoparticles, complexes of the listed polymers with chitosan are used. In this research, pectin, a polysaccharide formed mainly by residues of galacturonic acid, was used as a structural polymer. The concentrations of substances in the initial solutions were selected that were optimal for the synthesis of microcapsules. The main parameters for evaluating the resulting microparticles were the size of the capsules (less than 1 μm for oral inclusion), the zeta-potential, showing the tendency of the microparticles to stick together, and the completeness of the binding of the microparticles to chitosan. It was found that the optimal solutions for the synthesis of microparticles are: 15.7 ml of a solution of pectin 0.093% by weight, 3.3 ml of a solution of chitosan 0.07% by weight and 1.0 ml of a solution of CaCl2 20 mM. The diameter of the microparticles obtained by this method was 700-800 nm, and the value of their zetta-potential, equal to - (34 ± 3) mV, does not cross the particle adhesion threshold. It was also found that the synthesis of microparticles at these concentrations of calcium chloride provides the most complete binding of chitosan to their surface, which increases the mucoadhesive properties of microparticles."


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 184-191
Author(s):  
Prerna Kaushik ◽  
Deepak Kaushik

: The reason that the oral route attained such acceptance may be ascribed to its affluence of administration. Over the years, patient convenience- oriented exploration in the area of drug delivery has introduced potential innovative medicine delivery systems. The elegant drug delivery system is an amalgamation of science and dexterity with therapeutic prospect and presentability. It involves the administration of medications in a groundbreaking fashion with the assistance of cosmetics, wearable devices and oral drug delivery system which can also be used for ornamental purposes. Out of which, therapeutic chewing gum offers a highly suitable and amenable technique of dosing medications comprising children and elderlies. It is a potentially convenient means of administering medications either locally or systematically via the oral cavity. It bids innumerable gains over conventional drug delivery methods. Moreover, medicinal chewing gums involve the dynamic and constant masticatory actions for drug release. Currently, enriched expertise has made it promising to advance and fabricate medicated chewing gum with predefined properties and it could be a marketable triumph in the future. Apprehending this, several investigators and pharmaceutical companies are now engaged in developing innovative practices vis-à-vis medicated chewing gums by filing several patents in this area. The present manuscript also delivers a gestalt of various patented technology platforms based on different methods/ mechanisms employed for the preparation of medicated chewing gums.


2020 ◽  
pp. 002367722095078
Author(s):  
Luísa Teixeira-Santos ◽  
António Albino-Teixeira ◽  
Dora Pinho

Drug administration to experimental rodents is often invasive and stressful, thus reducing animal welfare and potentially confounding experimental results. Methods of oral drug delivery in which rodents cooperate voluntarily minimize stress, pain and morbidity. We herein describe a method for oral administration through voluntary intake of strawberry jam, developed for C57BL/6J mice. During a 3-day habituation period, animals were placed in individual cages once daily and presented with a drop of jam. Five days later, the jam was again offered with admixed drug. Mice ingested it in less than 5 min, with latency times below 1 min, confirming the suitability of the administration method.


1970 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 65-73
Author(s):  
Saloni Jain ◽  
Rahul Ancheriya ◽  
S Srivastva ◽  
Shankar Lal Soni ◽  
Mukesh Sharma

Novel drug delivery systems (NDDS) are one of the most strategies which enable to overcome the problems related to drug bioavailability. It is the rate and extent to which a drug becomes available to the target tissue after its administration. Over the last century, phyto-chemical science and phyto-pharmacological science established numerous plant compounds with various biological activities and health promoting benefits such as anti-mutagenicity, anti-carcinogenicity and anti-oxidative activity, for age-related diseases namely memory loss, osteoporosis, diabetic wounds, immune and liver disorders, etc. Herbal medicines have been known since eons for their safety, efficacy, folk acceptability and fewer side effects.  


INDIAN DRUGS ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (06) ◽  
pp. 7-20
Author(s):  
H. V. Raghavendra Reddy ◽  
Sayani Bhattacharyya ◽  

Buccal delivery is an interesting route of delivery owing to the easy administration of drugs. Buccal delivery releases the drug into the oral cavity and promotes absorption through the oral mucosa and transmucosa to achieve local and systemic actions. This route of delivery can be successfully used to attain site-specific release of drug on mucosa. The suitable architecture of oral mucosa makes it suitable for delivery of drugs that extensively undergo hepatic first pass and presystemic metabolism. The limited surface area for absorption, mucosal barrier and other physiological activities, however, limit the rate of absorption from the oral cavity. The obstacles of oral route can be overcome using mucoadhesive dosage forms with innovative drug delivery systems. This review addresses the anatomical features of oral cavity, barriers in drug absorption from oral cavity, possible ways of oral drug delivery, mucoadhesion and the recent developments in mucoadhesive buccal delivery.


Author(s):  
Harkirat Singh ◽  
Lakhvir Kaur ◽  
Gurjeet Singh ◽  
RK Dhawan

The oral route is the most popular and favoured method of drug administration. Orodispersible tablets are becoming more common among novel oral drug delivery systems because they increase patient compliance and provide some additional benefits over other oral formulations. They are also strong unit dosage types that, in the presence of saliva, disintegrate in the mouth within a minute due to super disintegrants in the formulation. As a result, this method of drug delivery aids in proper peroral administration of paediatric and geriatric patients who have difficulty swallowing. Various scientists have used various methods to create orodispersible tablets. The compression process is, however, the most popular method of preparation. Molding, melt granulation, phase-transition technique, sublimation, freeze-drying, spray-drying, and the effervescent method are some of the other unique processes. The flavour of these tablets is significant since they dissolve immediately in the mouth. To mask the drug's acidic flavour, a variety of techniques have been used. In this area, a number of scientists have looked at a variety of drugs. They are tested in the fields of stiffness, friability, wetting time, moisture absorption, disintegration test, and dissolution test, much as any other solid dosage types.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2-S) ◽  
pp. 156-161
Author(s):  
Hans Raj ◽  
Shagun Sharma ◽  
Ankita Sharma ◽  
Kapil Kumar Verma ◽  
Amit Chaudhary

Microspheres are multiparticulate drug delivery systems that are designed to deliver drugs to a particular location at a fixed rate. Microspheres are free-flowing powders made up of biodegradable proteins or synthetic polymers with particle sizes ranging from 1 to 1000µm. Benefits of the use of microspheres in fields such as drug delivery, bone tissue manufacturing, and the absorption and desorption of contaminants by regeneration. The study shows the method of planning and measurement of microsphere parameters. Microspheres are complex, such as bioadhesive microspheres, polymeric microspheres, magnetic microspheres, floating microspheres, radioactive microspheres. Microspheres may be used in various fields such as cosmetics, oral drug delivery, target drug delivery, ophthalmic drug delivery, gene delivery, and others listed in the study. In order to achieve optimal therapeutic effectiveness, it is important to deliver the agent to the target tissue at an optimum level within the right timeframe, resulting in little toxicity and minimal side effects. There are different approaches to supplying the medicinal drug to the target site in a continuous managed manner. One such strategy is the use of microspheres as drug carriers. In this article, the value of the microsphere is seen as a novel drug delivery carrier to achieve site-specific drug delivery was discussed. Keywords: microspheres, method of preparations, polymer, bioadhesion, types of microspheres


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 303-317
Author(s):  
SANTOSH KUMAR RADA ◽  
Annu Kumari

Drug delivery by the oral route is the most prescribable and acceptable route in terms of patient’s compliance. Improvement of patient’s compliance has always a challenge towards the development of oral drug delivery system. In the market different types of oral dosage forms are available in which tablets, capsules, syrups, suspensions are preferred ones. Oral solid drug delivery faces drawback in case of swallowing especially with paediatrics and geriatric psychotic patients. Therefore scientists attracted towards fast mouth dissolving drug delivery systems to encounter existing problems with unique property of palatability and rapid disintegration. The concept of fast dissolving tablet came into existence in late 1970 and further improvements are still going on in connection with its preparation and methodology. Fast dissolving tablets have faster disintegration and dissolution rate and releases within 30 seconds as they come in contact with saliva. These systems also obviate the requirement of carry water during drug administration. This facilitate drug delivery to the patients of dysphasic, psychic, paediatrics, geriatric and bed-ridden, unconscious population. As fast dissolving tablets falls under desired expectation of safer, convenient and economical solid dosage forms, several techniques have been developed to improve disintegration quality in the recent past years. This article mainly focuses on formulation and evaluation technologies with recent advancement made so far in the field of fast dissolving tablets. Keywords: Fast disintegration; Dysphasia; Mouth dissolving; Self-medication.


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