Autor: |
King, Martin J, Michel, Deborah, Foldvari, Marianna |
Zdroj: |
Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology; October 2003, Vol. 55 Issue: 10 p1339-1344, 6p |
Abstrakt: |
The cutaneous delivery pathway through the lymphatics of a novel transdermal lipid-based delivery system (biphasic vesicles), which was previously shown to deliver sustained physiological levels of basal insulin in a pain-free manner across the skin, was evaluated in a diabetic rat model. Transdermal patches (one per rat) containing insulin in biphasic vesicles (1–10 mg recombinant human insulin dose) were applied to the shaved abdominal skin of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats for 73 h. Blood glucose was monitored approximately every 2–10 h using a Lifescan glucose meter. Inguinal lymph node insulin levels were analysed by ELISA. Insulin in the lymph nodes increased in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Maximal transdermal insulin concentrations in the lymph nodes were observed with both 140 IU (5 mg: 43.0 + 18.0 μIU mg−1(mean + s.e.m., n = 4)) and 280 IU (10 mg: 48.0 + 19.6 μIU mg−1(mean + s.e.m., n = 4)) doses of recombinant insulin at t = 73 h. The level of insulin in the lymph nodes after subcutaneous injection of 1 mg insulin at the peak blood glucose response was 35.8 μIU mg−1(n = 2), before falling to 0.35 μIU mg−1by t = 48 h (n = 2). The lymphatics is involved in the transdermal insulin delivery by biphasic vesicles. This is the first report on the lymphatic transport of a protein after non-invasive topical application on the skin. |
Databáze: |
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