Fluorescein permeability and electrical resistance of human skin during low frequency ultrasound application

Author:

Cancel Limary M1,Tarbell John M1,Ben-Jebria Abdellaziz1

Affiliation:

1. Biomolecular Transport Dynamics Laboratory, Department of Chemical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA

Abstract

Abstract Transdermal drug delivery offers an alternative to injections and oral medication but is limited by the low skin permeability of most drugs. The use of low-frequency ultrasound over long periods of time, typically over an hour, has been shown to enhance skin permeability, a phenomenon referred to as sonophoresis. In this study, we investigated the effects of short time sonication of human skin at 20 kHz and at variable intensities and duty cycles on the dynamics of fluorescein transport across the skin (permeability) as well as the changes in the skin's structural integrity (electrical resistance). We found that a short application of ultrasound enhanced the transport of fluorescein across human skin by a factor in the range of 2–9 for full thickness skin samples and by a factor in the range of 2–28 000 for heat-stripped stratum corneum samples (however, samples with very high (103) enhancement were likely to have been damaged by ultrasound). The electrical resistance of the skin decreased by an average of 20% for full thickness samples and 58% for stratum corneum samples. Increasing the duty cycle from 10 to 60% caused a significant increase in permeability enhancement from 2.3 to 9.1, and an increase in intensity from 8 to 23 mW cm2 induced a significant increase in permeability enhancement from 2 to 7.4, indicating a clear dependence of the permeability on both duty cycle and intensity. The increase in solute flux upon ultrasound exposure was immediate, demonstrating for the first time the fast response dynamics of sonophoretic enhancement. In addition, a quantitative analysis of the thermal and convective dispersion effects associated with ultrasound application showed that each contributes significantly to the overall permeability enhancement observed.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology

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