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Featured researches published by Rodrigo Molina Martins.


Drying Technology | 2012

Spray Congealing of Pharmaceuticals: Study on Production of Solid Dispersions Using Box-Behnken Design

Rodrigo Molina Martins; Silvia Regina Dowgan Tesseroli de Siqueira; L. A. P. Freitas

This work aimed at evaluating the spray congealing method for the production of microparticles of carbamazepine combined with a polyoxylglyceride carrier. In addition, the influence of the spray congealing conditions on the improvement of drug solubility was investigated using a three-factor, three-level Box-Behnken design. The factors studied were the cooling air flow rate, atomizing pressure, and molten dispersion feed rate. Dependent variables were the yield, solubility, encapsulation efficiency, particle size, water activity, and flow properties. Statistical analysis showed that only the yield was affected by the factors studied. The characteristics of the microparticles were evaluated using X-ray powder diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and hot-stage microscopy. The results showed a spherical morphology and changes in the crystalline state of the drug. The microparticles were obtained with good yields and encapsulation efficiencies, which ranged from 50 to 80% and 99.5 to 112%, respectively. The average size of the microparticles ranged from 17.7 to 39.4 µm, the water activities were always below 0.5, and flowability was good to moderate. Both the solubility and dissolution rate of carbamazepine from the spray congealed microparticles were remarkably improved. The carbamazepine solubility showed a threefold increase and dissolution profile showed a twofold increase after 60 min compared to the raw drug. The Box-Behnken fractional factorial design proved to be a powerful tool to identify the best conditions for the manufacture of solid dispersion microparticles by spray congealing.


Drying Technology | 2012

Microparticulated Hydrochlorothiazide Solid Dispersion: Enhancing Dissolution Properties via Spray Drying

Rodrigo Molina Martins; M. O. Machado; Simone Vieira Pereira; A. B. F. L. Nosari; Luciana A. Tacon; L. A. P. Freitas

The aim of the present study was to obtain microparticles of hydrochlorothiazide, a diuretic drug that practically insoluble in water, by spray drying and to investigate the influence of process parameters using a three-level, three-factor Box-Behnken design. Process yields, moisture content, particle size, flowability, and solubility were used to evaluate the spray-dried microparticles. The data were analyzed by response surface methodology using analysis of variance. The independent variables studied were outlet temperature, atomization pressure, and drug content. The formulations were prepared using polyvinylpyrrolidone and colloidal silicon dioxide as the hydrophilic carrier and drying aid, respectively. The microparticle yield ranged from 18.15 to 59.02% and resulted in adequate flow (17 to 32°), moisture content between 2.52 to 6.18%, and mean particle size from 45 to 59 µm. The analysis of variance showed that the factors studied influenced the yields, moisture content, angle of repose, and solubility. Thermal analysis and X-ray diffractometry evidenced no drug interactions or chemical modifications. Photomicrographs obtained by scanning electron microscopy showed spherical particles. The solubility and dissolution rates of hydrochlorothiazide were remarkably improved when compared with pure drug. Therefore, the results confirmed the high potential of the spray-drying technique to obtain microparticulate hydrochlorothiazide with enhanced pharmaceutical and dissolution properties.


Drying Technology | 2012

Engineering Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients by Spray Drying: Effects on Physical Properties and In Vitro Dissolution

Rodrigo Molina Martins; M. O. Machado; Simone Vieira Pereira; A. B. F. L. Nosari; Luciana A. Tacon; L. A. P. Freitas

Active pharmaceutical ingredients have very strict quality requirements; minor changes in the physical and chemical properties of pharmaceuticals can adversely affect the dissolution rate and therefore the bioavailability of a given drug. Accordingly, the aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of spray drying on the physical and in vitro dissolution properties of four different active pharmaceutical ingredients, namely carbamazepine, indomethacin, piroxicam, and nifedipine. Each drug was dispersed in a solution of ethanol and water (70:30) and subjected to single-step spray drying using similar operational conditions. A complete characterization of the spray-dried drugs was performed via differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), particle size distribution analysis, solubility analysis, and an in vitro dissolution study. The results from the thermal analysis and X-ray diffraction showed that, except for carbamazepine, no chemical modifications occurred as a result of spray drying. Moreover, the particle size distribution of all the spray-dried drugs significantly decreased. In addition, SEM images showed that most of the particles had an irregular shape. There was no significant improvement in the solubility of the spray-dried drugs compared with the unprocessed compounds; however, in general, the dissolution rates of the spray-dried drugs showed a remarkable improvement over their non-spray-dried counterparts. Therefore, the results from this study demonstrate that a single spray-drying step may lead to changes in the physical properties and dissolution characteristics of drugs and thus improve their therapeutic action.


Journal of Microencapsulation | 2014

Skin penetration and photoprotection of topical formulations containing benzophenone-3 solid lipid microparticles prepared by the solvent-free spray-congealing technique.

Rodrigo Molina Martins; Silvia Regina Dowgan Tesseroli de Siqueira; Maria José Vieira Fonseca; L. A. P. Freitas

Abstract Purpose: Solid-lipid microparticles loaded with high amounts of the sunscreen UV filter benzophenone-3 were prepared by spray congealing with the objective of decreasing its skin penetration and evaluate whether the sunscreen’s photoprotection were impaired by the microencapsulation process. Methods: The microparticles were produced using the natural lipids carnauba wax or bees wax and three different concentrations of benzophenone-3 (30, 50 and 70%) using spray congealing technique. Results: The microparticles presented properties suitable for topical application, such as spherical morphology, high encapsulation efficiency (95.53–102.2%), average particle sizes between 28.5 and 60.0 µm with polydispersivities from 1.2 to 2.5. In studies of in vitro skin penetration and preliminary stability, formulations of gel cream containing carnauba wax solid lipid microparticles and 70% benzophenone-3 when compared to the formulation added of bees wax solid-lipid microparticles containing 70% benzophenone-3, was stable considering the several parameters evaluated and were able to decrease the penetration of the UV filter into pig skin. Moreover, the formulations containing solid lipid microparticles with 70% benzophenone-3 increased the photoprotective capacity of benzophenone-3 under UV irradiation. Conclusion: The results show that spray-congealed microparticles are interesting solid forms to decrease the penetration solar filters in the skin without compromising their photoprotection.


Journal of Microencapsulation | 2013

The effect of homogenization method on the properties of carbamazepine microparticles prepared by spray congealing

Rodrigo Molina Martins; Silvia Regina Dowgan Tesseroli de Siqueira; Marcela Olaia Machado; L. A. P. Freitas

Abstract The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of ultrasound and high-shear mixing on the properties of microparticles obtained by spray congealing. Dispersions containing 10% carbamazepine and 90% carrier Gelucire® 50/13 (w/w) were prepared using magnetic stirring, high-shear mixing, or ultrasound. Each preparation was made using hot-melt mixing spray congealing to obtain the microparticles. All microparticles presented a spherical shape with high encapsulation efficiency (>99%). High-shear mixing and ultrasound promoted a decrease in the size of microparticles (D90) to 62.8 ± 4.1 μm and 64.9 ± 3.3 μm, respectively, while magnetic stirring produced microparticles with a size of 84.1 ± 1.4 µm. The use of ultrasound led to microparticles with increased moisture content as identified through sorption isotherm studies. In addition, rheograms showed distinct rheological behaviour among different dispersion preparations. Therefore, the technique used to prepare dispersions for spray congealing can affect specific characteristics of the microparticles and should be controlled during the preparation.


Drying Technology | 2014

Spray Cooling Process Factors and Quality Interactions During the Preparation of Microparticles Containing an Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient

Simone Vieira Pereira; Fábio Belotti Colombo; Rodrigo Molina Martins; L. A. P. Freitas

The current work studies the spray-cooling process factors and quality interactions during the production of microparticulated solid dispersions containing piroxicam, polyethylene glycol 4000, and poloxamer 407. The Box-Behnken factorial design was used to evaluate the influence of the temperature of the molten dispersion, the percentage of poloxamer 407 in the sample, and dispersion feed rate on the microparticles. The dependent variables studied by this design were particle size, flow properties, drug content, and solubility. Microparticle characterization was done through X-ray powder diffraction, thermogravimetry, differential scanning calorimetry, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and in vitro dissolution analysis. Statistical analysis showed that the factors studied in Box-Behnken factorial design significantly influenced (p < 0.05) the Carr index, the Hausner factor, and the solubility of these microparticles. The microparticles presented average diameter from 72 to 120 µm, moderate to excellent flowability, drug content between 77.5 to 99.2%, and an increase in solubility between 2.5- and 5.4-fold when compared to the solubility of the pure drug. In dissolution tests, more than 75.0% of the piroxicam present in the microparticles was released in just 2.5 minutes and the microparticles promoted a total release of the drug. In addition, microparticles increased both the release rate and the amount of drug released.


Food Research International | 2013

Curcuminoid content and antioxidant activity in spray dried microparticles containing turmeric extract

Rodrigo Molina Martins; Simone Vieira Pereira; Silvia Regina Dowgan Tesseroli de Siqueira; Wellington Fioravante Salomão; L. A. P. Freitas


Powder Technology | 2012

Microstructured ternary solid dispersions to improve carbamazepine solubility

Rodrigo Molina Martins; Silvia Regina Dowgan Tesseroli de Siqueira; Luciana A. Tacon; L. A. P. Freitas


Revista Brasileira De Farmacognosia-brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy | 2015

Nanoparticles containing curcuminoids (Curcuma longa): development of topical delivery formulation

Cristina Mara Zamarioli; Rodrigo Molina Martins; Emilia Campos de Carvalho; L. A. P. Freitas


Powder Technology | 2015

Granulation of indomethacin and a hydrophilic carrier by fluidized hot melt method: The drug solubility enhancement

Toni C. Andrade; Rodrigo Molina Martins; L. A. P. Freitas

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M. O. Machado

University of São Paulo

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