Sign In

Solid dosage forms such as tablets and capsules undergo rigorous manufacturing processes to ensure stability and effectiveness. Their dissolution and absorption properties are influenced significantly by the choice of excipients (inactive ingredients that serve various roles in the formulation), and the methodology applied during production. The manufacturing parameters, such as compression force and granulation techniques, significantly affect dissolution rates. Elevated compression forces contribute to a higher tablet density, negatively impacting wettability while augmenting structural integrity, thereby decelerating dissolution. The formulation often includes excipients that stabilize the product, enhance functionality, and ensure optimal bioavailability. These excipients range from vehicles and diluents, which facilitate the drug's incorporation into the systemic circulation, to disintegrants and surfactants, which foster tablet disintegration and lower the surface tension between two ingredients to make them more miscible, respectively. The strategic employment of binders adds cohesion to powders to allow tablets to stick together, whereas lubricants minimize intergranular friction and help keep ingredients from sticking together.

Considering these excipients' hydrophilic or hydrophobic nature is imperative, as their interaction with the drug substance can profoundly impact dissolution characteristics. For instance, hydrophilic diluents enhance the dissolution of hydrophobic drugs, while hydrophobic binders and lubricants might hinder this process.

From Chapter 3:

article

Now Playing

3.18 : Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Pharmaceutical Parameters

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

31 Views

article

3.1 : Drug Administration and Therapy Phases: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

137 Views

article

3.2 : Drug Absorption: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

195 Views

article

3.3 : Drug Delivery: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

100 Views

article

3.4 : Drug Delivery: Enteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

87 Views

article

3.5 : Drug Delivery: Parenteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

74 Views

article

3.6 : Drug Delivery: Miscellaneous Routes

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

68 Views

article

3.7 : Cellular Membranes and Drug Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

71 Views

article

3.8 : Mechanisms of Drug Absorption: Paracellular, Transcellular, and Vesicular Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

124 Views

article

3.9 : Passive Diffusion: Overview and Kinetics

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

92 Views

article

3.10 : Pore Transport and Ion-Pair Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

131 Views

article

3.11 : Carrier-Mediated Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

81 Views

article

3.12 : Facilitated Diffusion

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

80 Views

article

3.13 : Active Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

139 Views

article

3.14 : Vesicular Trasport: Endocytosis, Transcytosis and Exocytosis

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

231 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved