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1.
Braz. j. pharm. sci ; 52(3): 347-363, July-Sept. 2016. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-828275

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT Vegetable oils present important pharmacological properties, which gained ground in the pharmaceutical field. Its encapsulation in nanoemulsions is considered a promising strategy to facilitate the applicability of these natural compounds and to potentiate the actions. These formulations offer several advantages for topical and systemic delivery of cosmetic and pharmaceutical agents including controlled droplet size, protection of the vegetable oil to photo, thermal and volatilization instability and ability to dissolve and stabilize lipophilic drugs. For these reasons, the aim of this review is to report on some characteristics, preparation methods, applications and especially analyze recent research available in the literature concerning the use of vegetable oils with therapeutic characteristics as lipid core in nanoemulsions, specially from Brazilian flora, such as babassu (Orbignya oleifera), aroeira (Schinus molle L.), andiroba (Carapa guaianiensis), casca-de-anta (Drimys brasiliensis Miers), sucupira (Pterodon emarginatus Vogel) and carqueja doce (Stenachaenium megapotamicum) oils.


Subject(s)
Plant Oils/analysis , Plant Oils/pharmacology , Anacardiaceae , Emulsions/pharmacology
2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-176905

ABSTRACT

Liquid chromatographic method was developed and validated for quantitative determination of quinine in polymeric nanoparticles. The method was performed using a Waters RP-18 column using a mobile phase consisting of acetonitrile:water:triethylamine (60:40:0.01 v/v/v, and pH aqueous phase adjusted to 3.0 with phosphoric acid). The flow rate was 1.0 mL min-1 and the detection was achieved with a UV-PDA set at 232 nm. The response was linear over a range of 12.0 to 24.0 μg.mL-1 (r = 0.9995). The relative standard deviation values for intra-day and inter-day precision studies were less than 2% and the accuracy was 98.8% to Nc1 and 97.3% to Nc2. The samples free of quinine and quinine-loaded polymeric nanoparticles were subjected to photodegradation conditions. A considerable reduction of degradation of quinine occurred in polymeric nanoparticles. Through these results, it was clear that the nanoencapsulation of quinine protects the drug from degradation by exposure to UV-A light. The analytical method was validated according to International Conference on Harmonization Guidelines and Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

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