Abstract
Interrelationships among moisture, hardness, disintegration and dissolution in compressed tablets were studied by compressing tablets from granulations prepared by the wet granulation process containing low moisture levels. Hardness, disintegration and dissolution of these tablets did not change on exposure to ambient room conditions. After equilibration under high humidities, a decrease in tablet hardness occurred which depended linearly on tablet hardnesses at the time of compression. After overnight exposure to ambient room conditions, the softened tablets increased in hardness and this increase greatly exceeded the initial hardnesses. The magnitude of hardness increase was independent of the hardnesses at the time of compression. Increased tablet hardnesses resulted in an increase in the disintegration time, although in vitro dissolution of the drug remained unaffected. The results suggest that moisture gain and subsequent loss on storage under varying humidity conditions could account for major increases in hardness of compressed tablets in storage.

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