OLEIC-ACID CONCENTRATION AND EFFECT IN HUMAN STRATUM-CORNEUM - NONINVASIVE DETERMINATION BY ATTENUATED TOTAL REFLECTANCE INFRARED-SPECTROSCOPY INVIVO

被引:62
作者
MAK, VHW [1 ]
POTTS, RO [1 ]
GUY, RH [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO,SCH PHARM,DEPT PHARM,SAN FRANCISCO,CA 94143
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
infrared spectroscopy; oleic acid; skin penetration; stratum corneum; transdermal drug delivery;
D O I
10.1016/0168-3659(90)90184-U
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Attenuated total reflectance infrared (ATR-IR) spectroscopy was used to study, in vivo, the mechanism of action of a putative skin penetration enhancer, oleic acid. Specifically, the spectroscopic technique monitored structural changes and enhancer concentration in the stratum corneum (SC) (skin's outermost and least permeable layer) following treatment with oleic acid in ethanol. As previously observed in vitro, oleic acid increased the hydrocarbon chain disorder of the inter-cellular lipid domains of the SC in vivo. The effects of the enhancer were prolonged but reversible. It also appeared that the treatment of the skin with oleic acid for 0.5 hour caused a gradient of effect (i.e. increased lipid disorder) that decreased from superficial to inner stratum corneum layers. However, this gradient was normalized by increasing the time of exposure of the skin to the enhancer. Although the oleic acid-induced lipid hydrocarbon chain disorder in vivo maximized at a concentration of 1% oleic acid in ethanol, the in vitro uptake of radiolabelied enhancer into excised SC increased linearly with concentration up to 10%. Further experiments showed that the saturation of response in vivo was not solubility limited. Precise analysis of the IR spectra enabled an absorption band to be assigned mainly to oleic acid and to be used, therefore, to quantity SC uptake of enhancer in vivo. A quite linear correlation between (radiochemical) in vitro and (spectroscopic) in vivo assessments of oleic acid in SC was found. Overall, then, the results reported support the conclusions: (a) that ATR-IR can monitor the effects of penetration enhancers on skin barrier function in vivo, and (b) that, in the case of oleic acid, the technique can estimate the level of enhancer within the SC as a function of time and, possibly, position. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 75
页数:9
相关论文
共 26 条
[1]  
Scheuplein, Blank, Permeability of the skin, Physiol. Rev., 51, pp. 701-747, (1971)
[2]  
Elias, Plastic wrap revisited, Arch. Dermatol., 123, pp. 1405-1406, (1987)
[3]  
Wertz, Swartzendruber, Abraham, Madison, Downing, Essential fatty acids and epidermal integrity, Archives of Dermatology, 123, pp. 1381-1384, (1987)
[4]  
Williams, Elias, The extracellular matrix of stratum corneum: Role of lipids in normal and pathological function, CRC Crit. Rev. Ther. Drug Carrier Syst., 3, pp. 95-122, (1987)
[5]  
Blank, Factors which influence the water content of the stratum comeum, J. Invest. Dermatol., 18, pp. 433-440, (1952)
[6]  
Onken, Moyer, The water barrier in human epidermis. Physical and chemical nature, Arch. Dermatol., 87, pp. 584-590, (1963)
[7]  
Elias, Cooper, Korc, Brown, Percutaneous transport in relation to stratum corneum structure and lipid composition, J. Invest. Dermatol., 67, pp. 291-301, (1981)
[8]  
Smith, Christensen, Nacht, Effect of lipids on the aggregation and permeability of human stratum corneum, J. Invest. Dermatol., 78, pp. 7-11, (1982)
[9]  
Albery, Hadgraft, Percutaneous absorption: Theoretical description, J. Pharm. Pharmacol., 31, pp. 129-139, (1979)
[10]  
Albery, Hadgraft, Percutaneous absorption: in vivo experiments, J. Pharm. Pharmacol., 31, pp. 140-147, (1979)