Mechanism of enhancement of percutaneous absorption of molsidomine by oleic acid.
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Pharmaceutical Society of Japan in CHEMICAL & PHARMACEUTICAL BULLETIN
- Vol. 35 (8), 3399-3406
- https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.35.3399
Abstract
The mechanism of percutaneous absorption of molsidomine, enhanced by a two-component system consisting of oleic acid and propylene glycol, was studied in vitro and in vivo in rats. About 10-20% of the oleic acid was absorbed from the skin independently of the oleic acid-propylene glycol ratio. In contrast, about 95% of molsidomine and propylene glycol were transdermally absorbed from the two-component system containing 10% oleic acid in 6 h. The permeability (percent of dose) of molsidomine through the excised rat skin was comparable to that of propylene glycol (both about 80% in 24 h). These results suggest that the molsidomine and propylene glycol permeated simultaneously through rat skin. Our proposed mechanism of percutaneous absorption of mosdidomine assumes that oleic acid and propylene glycol penetrate into the stratum corneum and improve the permeability of the skin by dissolving hard lipoidal components, and then molsidomine, dissolved in the propylene glycol, passes through the modified stratum corneum.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Increased Skin Permeability for Lipophilic MoleculesJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1984
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