Abstract

Objectives: This study involves the development of a discriminatory method to differentiate the in vitro dissolution of cilnidipine’s mouth-dispersing film from that of a commercial tablet. Methods: The mouth-dispersing film was initially developed using a reported established method. A discriminatory dissolution method was developed to assess the in vitro dissolution of the mouth-dispersing film and compare the same with that of the commercial tablet. Results: The study findings indicated the method employed was able to differentiate the dissolution of the fast-dissolving film from the commercial tablet. About 98.52±0.60% of the drug was found to be released from the oral film in 40 min whereas the tablet took nearly 5 h for 92.06±0.49% of the drug to get released. Conclusion: These results demonstrate that the dissolution media identified was able to create the necessary sink condition that would be able to differentiate the dissolution profile of the mouth-dispersing film from the conventional tablet. The ultrasound spectrophotometric method employed was found to be simple rapid and sensitive enough to estimate the drug release from diverse pharmaceutical dosage forms.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call