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Pharmaceutical Applications of Hot-Melt Extrusion: Part I

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TLDR
The pharmaceutical applications of hot-melt extrusion, including equipment, principles of operation, and process technology, are reviewed and the physicochemical properties of the resultant dosage forms are described.
Abstract
Interest in hot-melt extrusion techniques for pharmaceutical applications is growing rapidly with well over 100 papers published in the pharmaceutical scientific literature in the last 12 years. Hot-melt extrusion (HME) has been a widely applied technique in the plastics industry and has been demonstrated recently to be a viable method to prepare several types of dosage forms and drug delivery systems. Hot-melt extruded dosage forms are complex mixtures of active medicaments, functional excipients, and processing aids. HME also offers several advantages over traditional pharmaceutical processing techniques including the absence of solvents, few processing steps, continuous operation, and the possibility of the formation of solid dispersions and improved bioavailability. This article, Part I, reviews the pharmaceutical applications of hot-melt extrusion, including equipment, principles of operation, and process technology. The raw materials processed using this technique are also detailed and the physicochemical properties of the resultant dosage forms are described. Part II of this review will focus on various applications of HME in drug delivery such as granules, pellets, immediate and modified release tablets, transmucosal and transdermal systems, and implants.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Towards predicting the product quality in hot-melt extrusion: Small scale extrusion.

TL;DR: The results of the investigation indicate that the average melt temperatures and the exposure times in specific zones along the screw configuration correlate well with the API degradation values and can be used as potent process design criteria to simplify the process development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanochemical Applications of Reactive Extrusion from Organic Synthesis to Catalytic and Active Materials

TL;DR: In this paper , a new environmentally friendly mechanochemical synthetic method may be able to miniaturize production plants with outstanding process intensifications by removing organic solvents and working in a flow mode.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism for Polymorphic Transformation of Artemisinin during High Temperature Extrusion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the mechanisms causing phase transformation during the extrusion process of artemisinin using hot stage microscopy and a model shear cell and observed phase transformation from orthorhombic to triclinic crystals through a vapor phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preformulation study of fiber formation and formulation of drug-loaded microfiber based orodispersible tablets for in vitro dissolution enhancement.

TL;DR: X-ray diffraction patterns indicated that the drug embedded in microfibers was in amorphous state, and the decrease of o-Ps lifetime values suggested that fiber formation enabled the development of a more ordered fibrous system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanostructured lipid carriers: a promising drug carrier for targeting brain tumours

TL;DR: In this article , the authors highlighted the application and potential of NLCs in brain-specific delivery of chemotherapeutic agents and summarized various in vitro and in vivo research studies on NLC encapsulated with cytotoxic drugs and their potential application in brainspecific drug delivery.
References
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Book

Polymer Science and Technology

Joel Fried
TL;DR: The authors provided the basic building blocks of polymer science and engineering by coverage of fundamental polymer chemistry and materials topics given in Chapters 1 through 7 and provided information on the exciting new materialsnow available and the emerging areas of technological growth that could motivate a new generation of scientists and engineers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectroscopic characterization of interactions between PVP and indomethacin in amorphous molecular dispersions.

TL;DR: A comparison of the carbonyl stretching region of γ indomethacin, known to form carboxylic acid dimers, with that of amorphous indometHacin indicated that the amorphously phase exists predominantly as dimers.
Book

Principles of polymer engineering

TL;DR: In this article, the elastic properties of polymeric solids and their properties of rubber are discussed. But they focus on the structure of the molecule rather than the properties of the solids.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melt extrusion: from process to drug delivery technology

TL;DR: Improved bioavailability was achieved again demonstrating the value of the technology as a drug delivery tool, with particular advantages over solvent processes like co-precipitation.
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