Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Additive and Subtractive Manufacturing (ASM) Laboratory IIT Roorkee Roorkee India
2. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering IIT Roorkee Roorkee India
Abstract
AbstractThe significance of 3D printing has risen exponentially in biomedical and pharmaceutical applications. Its potential in the field of fabricating drug delivery systems, by virtue of processing biocompatible polymers, has been very lucrative. This work aims to tap the interstitial drug delivery kinetics that are often inaccessible through machine‐specific infill patterns in additive manufactured tablets fabricated using PVA biopolymer as an excipient. In this regard, a myo‐inositol containing tablet has been printed using Fused Deposition Modeling preceded by Hot Melt Extrusion drug loading route. Two machine‐specific infill patterns were taken, namely straight and grid. Later, these two distinct patterns were juxtaposed to obtain novel hybrid infill patterns in the tablets. Then, these tablets and their filament were subjected to various thermal, mechanical, imaging and pharmaceutical characterization tests to assess the feasibility of the research attempt. Finally, dissolution tests were conducted to evaluate their dissolution behavior over a time period. The characterization tests proved the scientific viability of this attempt along with amorphous existence of drug in the polymeric filament. The dissolution results showed favorable drug release by achieving interstitial dissolution timings with surface area/volume (SA/V) ratio being found to be the principal factor.
Funder
Department of Science and Technology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India
Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
Subject
Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials
Cited by
5 articles.
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