Indomethacin (IM) is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug which inhibits prostaglandin biosynthesis. It is practically insoluble in water and has the capacity to induce gastric injury. Hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HP-beta-CD) is an alkylated derivative of beta-CD with the capacity to form inclusion complexes with suitable molecules. IM is considered to form partial inclusion complexes with HP-beta-CD by enclosure of the p-chlorobenzoic part of the molecule in the cyclodextrin channel, reducing the adverse effects. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the gastric damage induced by the IM inclusion complex prepared by freeze-drying and spray-drying. A total of 135 Wistar rats weighing 224.4 +/- 62.5 g were put into 10 groups. They were allowed free access to water but were maintained fasted for 18 h before the first administration until the end of the experiment. IM acid-form, IM trihydrated-sodium-salt and IM-HP-beta-CD spray and freeze-dried, at normal and toxic doses, were administered through gastric cannula once/day for 3 days. Seventy-two hours after the first administration, the animals were sacrificed and the stomachs collected and prepared for morphological study by using the haematoxylin-eosin technique. Lesion indexes (rated 0/4) were developed and the type of injury was scored according to the severity of damage and the incidence of microscopic evidence of harm. Microscopic assessment demonstrated levels of injury with index one on 10-25%. The type of complexation method had different incidence but the same degree. The results show that IM inclusion complexation protects against gastric injury, reducing the incidence and the maximum degree of severity from 4 to 1, with a better performance of the spray-dried complex.
MCAs apparently improve several clinical biomarkers in a cohort of patients under pharmacist's follow-up. When including the time in pharmacist's followup in a GEE, the effect of the MCA disappeared, remaining only the time as a significant variable. Not considering the time in follow-up may be overestimating the effect of MCAs.
Indomethacin (IM), a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, has the capacity to induce hepatic and renal injuries when administrated systemically. The aim of this study is to assess the IM absorption from complexed forms when orally administered to rats, by means of a comparative evaluation of its capacity to induce hepatic and renal injury in different forms, namely IM acid, IM sodium salt or IM complexed with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HP-β-CD), using freeze- and spray-drying methods. A total of 135 Wistar rats weighing 224.4 ± 62.5 g were put into 10 groups. They were allowed free access to water but were maintained on fast for 18 h before the first administration until the end of the experiment. Water and HP-β-CD (control groups) and IM acid form, IM trihydrated-sodium-salt and IM-HP-β-CD spray- and freeze-dried, at normal and toxic doses (test groups), were orally administered once/day for 3 days. Seventy-two hours after the first administration, the animals were sacrificed and a fragment of the liver and one kidney were collected and prepared for histopathological evaluation. Lesion indexes (rated 0/4 for liver and 0/3 for kidney) were developed and the type of injury scored according to the severity of damage. A statistical analysis of the severity and incidence of lesions was carried out. Animals administered with IM complexed forms showed similar hepatic and renal lesions, both in toxic and therapeutic doses, when compared with those observed in animals administered with IM acid or salt forms. This suggests that under the present experimental conditions, IM is equally absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract, independently of the administered IM form.
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