화학공학소재연구정보센터
Thermochimica Acta, Vol.419, No.1-2, 259-266, 2004
Solution calorimetry as a tool for investigating drug interaction with intestinal fluid
Solution calorimetry offers a reproducible technique for measuring the enthalpy of solution (Delta(sol)H) of a solute dissolving into a solvent. The Delta(sol)H of two solutes, propranolol HCl and mannitol were determined in simulated intestinal fluid (SIF) solutions designed to model the fed and fasted states within the gut, and in Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) of varying pH. The bile salt and lipid within the SIF solutions formed mixed micelles. Both solutes exhibited endothermic reactions in all solvents. The Delta(sol)H for propranolol HCl in the SIF solutions differed from those in the HBSS and was lower in the fed state than the fasted state SIF solution, revealing an interaction between propranolol and the micellar phase in both SIF solutions. In contrast, for mannitol the Delta(sol)H was constant in all solutions indicating minimal interaction between mannitol and the micellar phases of the SIF solutions. In this study, solution calorimetry proved to be a simple method for measuring the enthalpy associated with the dissolution of model drugs in complex biological media such as SIF solutions. In addition, the derived power-time curves allowed the time taken for the powdered solutes to form solutions to be estimated. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.