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Formulation development and evaluation of nifedipine as pylorospasm inhibitor.

INTRODUCTION: In this study, different nifedipine-loaded formulations were prepared to treat pylorospasm, a sphincter muscle disorder characterized by delayed gastric emptying process. The efficacy of formulation was evaluated in patients by subjective assessment, gamma scintigraphic approaches, and confocal microscopy.

METHODS: Nifedipine-loaded different formulations such as sucrose bead, pellets, and microparticles (slugging method, ionotropic gelation, and chemical denaturation) were designed. The studies were performed on 50 subjects, of which 30 subjects were treated with optimized nifedipine loaded microcapsules while 20 subjects were given capsule becosule-Z as a control. The efficacy of formulation was assessed by comparing symptoms like dyspepsia, abdominal pain, abdominal fullness, poor appetite, nausea, vomiting, and irregular motion. The effectiveness of formulation was also assessed by gamma scintigraphic studies by determining the rate of emptying of a radioactivity labeled standard meal from patients' stomach into the duodenum. Confocal microscopy was used to assess targeting potential of developed formulation.

RESULTS: Drug-loaded alginate-chitosan microcapsules were found to be satisfactory, in terms of controlled drug release, surface morphology, and bioadhesive properties and thus selected for in vivo studies. Clinical studies revealed the efficacy of formulation in abolishing various GI symptoms at high altitude. Associated symptoms such as dyspepsia, abdominal pain, poor appetite, nausea, vomiting, and irregular motion were recovered by 75, 62, 76.5, 86.7, 85.7, and 37.5%, respectively in nifedipine-treated patients. In comparison, 73.7, 40, 33.3, 40, 20, and 0% recoveries were observed in patients given control treatment only. Gamma Scintigraphic studies in lab also revealed 2.425 ± 0.245 (p < .05) times improvement in gastric emptying rate in patients with diabetic gastroparesis. Confocal analysis showed better targeting and penetration in pyloric region when formulation was administered in form of high-density microcapsules.

CONCLUSIONS: Results strongly suggest that nifedipine loaded mucoadhesive formulation has a targeting potential which accelerates gastric emptying process in gastroparesis patients, and thus the formulation might prove useful as a potent prokinetic agent.

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