M. Schubert, C. Müller-Goymann
Sep 1, 2001
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Influential Citations
6
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Journal
Die Pharmazie
Abstract
In aqueous systems bromhexine hydrochloride (Br-HCl) has a poor solubility (4.54 mg/g) and displays no amphiphilic character e.g. self association. Therefore the drug is molecularly dispersed in water until the solubility product of Br-HCl is exceeded. Solubilization of Br-HCl is linearly increased on addition of lecithin; calculations show that 10 mg Phospholipon 90G (P 90G) enable solubilization of additional 1.25 mg Br-HCl after the solubility product of Br-HCl has been exceeded. This means that four to five phospholipid molecules are needed for the solubilization of one drug molecule. Ternary systems with P 90G concentrations up to 20% have a lamellar microstructure. The systems are multilamellar vesicle dispersions as polarisation microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray diffractometry suggest. Furthermore, Br-HCl solubilization leads to a significant reduction of the interlamellar distance d and increases the elastic properties of the systems. 31P NMR data provide evidence that Br-HCl is solubilized within the lipophilic part of the phospholipid bilayer.