Abstract

A study of the comparative effects of khaya gum and two standard binding agents––polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and gelatin––on crushing strength and friability, and the disintegration and dissolution characteristics of paracetamol tablets was made. The crushing strength-friability ratio (CSFR), the disintegration times, D, and the dissolution times t50, t90, and t1 (derived from the equation of Noyes and Whitney), all increased with an increase in binder concentration; however, the dissolution rate constants, k1 and k2, decreased. The ranking for the values of CSFR for tablets containing the different binders was PVP>gelatin>khaya gum. The ranking for D and the dissolution times was gelatin>khaya gum>PVP, whereas the ranking for the dissolution rate constants was PVP>khaya gum>gelatin. There were significant linear correlations between CSFR, D, t50, t90, and t1 for the tablets. There were also significant correlations between k1 and D, t50, t90, and t1, and between k2 and t90. The results suggest that khaya gum could be useful as an alternative binding agent to produce tablets with particular mechanical strength and drug release profiles.

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