Abstract

The purpose of the present work was to study the effect of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), an anionic surfactant, on the iontophoretic transport of a neutral drug hydrocortisone (HC) across hairless mouse skin. The transport studies were conducted using Side-Bi-Side diffusion apparatus and drug concentration in the receptor cell was analyzed using reversed-phase HPLC. A theoretical model was described, tested, and found to agree well with experimental data (R2 = 0.9766). Anodal iontophoresis significantly enhanced the transport of HC compared to cathodal iontophoresis and passive diffusion, suggesting that the transport of the neutral solute occurs via the electro-osmotic flow. The effect of SDS on the transport of HC was highly concentration-dependent and driving mode-dependent. Below the critical micelle concentration (cmc), increasing the concentration of SDS increased both the passive and the iontophoretic fluxes of HC, but the increase was most significant with anodal iontophoresis. Above the cmc, passive transport of HC continued to increase with an increase in the SDS concentration. The transport after anodal iontophoresis, however, reached a plateau and then leveled off. Further increase in SDS concentration decreased flux, suggesting that the transport of micellar-solubilized drug is retarded by anodal iontophoresis, possibly due to electrostatic attraction.

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