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Studies on cationic ocular emulsions containing bipartitioned oil droplets to codeliver cyclosporin A and etodolac.

Syed Nazrin R RahmanAbhinab GoswamiAishwarya JalaAnimith VenugantiApurba DekaRoshan M BorkarVivek SinghDipankar DasTamilvanan Shunmugaperumal
Published in: Nanomedicine (London, England) (2024)
Background: To prepare ocular emulsions containing bipartitioned oil droplets to entrap cyclosporin A (0.05% w/w) and etodolac (0.2% w/w) by using castor, olive and silicon oils. Methods: The physicochemical characterizations of prepared emulsions were performed. The drug's biodistribution profiles and pharmacokinetic parameters from emulsions were checked using the ultraperformance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method in the ocular tissues of the healthy rabbit eye model. Results: The emulsions displayed 365.13 ± 7.21 nm size and 26.45 ± 2.09 mV zeta potential. The ferrying of two drugs after releasing from emulsions occurred across corneal/conjunctival tissues to enter the vitreous and sclera following a single drop administration into the rabbit's eyes. Conclusion: The dual drug-loaded emulsions were more likely to produce synergistic anti-inflammatory activity for managing moderate-to-severe dry eye disease.
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