Pages

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

POWDERS

Smt. Dr. Jayanti Vijaya Ratna
Dear Students, Today I want to introduce to you one dosage form which is called as “Powder”. Powders were very popular dosage forms, once upon a time; at a time when it was common practice for a pharmacist to “compound” a prescription and dispense it. Today compounding is not thee and “oral powders” are almost nonexistent. Only you see occasionally, when old people or children cannot swallow tablets or capsules; the tablets or capsules are made into powders, by the people who are administering these medicines to them. Powders can be swallowed more easily but their taste is also felt more by the tongue. Let us today look at what are powders what are their advantages and disadvantages and let us consider a few prescriptions for powders. I want to just explain to you that the principles which are valid in the preparation of powders at a compounding level are also equally valid in the “manufacture” of powders or which are ultimately becoming granules in the preparation of tablets.

Classification of Powders:
1.     Bulk Powders for internal use
2.     Bulk Powders for external use
3.     Divided (single dose) powders
Advantages of Powders:
1.     When it is not possible to dispense a drug as a solution or a suspension, because of its insolubility or because it is susceptible to microbial continuation if it is wetted, then it is a good idea to dispense it as a
powder. A Few decades ago, when crude vegetable drugs were the most often prescribed drugs, dispensing them as powders was a good option.
2.     When a bulky drug that has a large dose is to be administered, a powder is a good way of administering it. Several compound bulk powders used to be there and mostly these were given for stomach conditions, such as indigestion, constipation and diarhoea. They used to contain large amounts of light materials such as Magnesium Carbonate. You can see the prescription of Gregory’s powder, as an example for this, in the last part of this article where prescriptions are discussed. When we are using powders for this type of use, we give the instruction “take a teaspoonful of the powder and swallow with water”. We can easily see that this is not an accurate way of administering medicines, as the same weights of various medicaments often have different volumes. So potent substances should never be given in the form of bulk powders.
3.     When tablets and capsules were not known administering insoluble, potent substances as powders was an option. You can see the prescriptions on codeine phosphate and Hyoscine hydrobromide as examples for this principle in.
4.     Small children and old people cannot swallow tablets and capsules. In such situations powders are a good option.
5.     Powders dispense fast in the Gastro Intestinal tract and the drugs are absorbed faster from these. Whereas tablets have to disintegrate first, the capsule shell has to dissolve first and then there may be some problems because excipients are included in these.
6.     When the patient has to mix the ingredients before administration, dispensing in separate divided powders is a convenient way. See the prescription on effervescent granules in.
7.     Powders are very good from chemical stability point of view.

Disadvantages of Powders:
1.     They are time consuming to prepare and pack.
2.     They are bulky to carry about.
3.     Powders may spill when they are being opened.
4.     When a tablet or a capsule is not suitable, a well formulated suspension may be a suitable     alternative.
5.     When a medicament with an unpleasant taste has to be administered, it may be given as a suspension or in a hard capsule form.
6.     Powders are not an ideal way of dispensing substances that are volatile deliquescent, hygroscopic or oxygen-sensitive.
A pharmaceutical powder is a mixture of finely divided drugs and / or excipeitns in dry form, meant for internal or external use.
One of the following three methods was widely used by the pharmacist, in yester years, for the preparation of powders.
1.    Trituration :
Trituration is a method by which we make coarse powders into small particles by rubbing them in a mortar with a pestle. We also use trituration to mix two dry powders.
2.    Pulverization by Intervention :
When it is difficult to powder a material in a mortar because it is soft or gummy, we add a second material which helps in the powdering and which is latter removed. So when material A resists
grinding, we add we can then grind them or pulverize them easily. Them material B is removed. For example, powdering camphor is difficult, so we add a small amount of alcohol to it and we them powder it, then we allow alcohol to evaporate.
3.    Levigation :  
The substance is powdered by adding a suitable non solvent (levigations agent) to it, to form a paste. We then rub the paste in a mortar and pestle. Liquid Paraffin is a commonly used levigations
agent. This method is used to incorporate solids into dematologic or ophthalmic ointments and suspensions to prevent a gritty feel.
Principles involved :
There are four principles involved in the preparations of powders. These principles are true for yester year’s powders and they are true for the preparation of granules in today’s manufacture of tablets and capsules.
1.    Drug Content Uniformity:  
When we are mixing powdered drugs, the final objective is to produce such a powder which is having drug content uniformity throughout. If the finished powder is taken in a paper, any 100mg sample, taken from any corner or middle or any place in it of the drugs should have the same ratio or the same contents of the drugs involved in the prescription.
2.    Fine size:  
The size of the powder should be fine. Coarse powders are difficult to swallow.
3.    Free flowing:  
The powders should not be wet. They should not be in lumps.
4.    Good taste:
Unpleasant taste should not be there. If it is there, it should be masked by adding sweetness.
5.    Amount
Should not be too large or too small.

Procedure:
These points are achieved by preparing powders in the following way.
1.    Geometric dilution:  
In this method we first take into the mortar, that drug which is minimum in weight (say drug A, 500mg) we powder it with the pestle, then we add to the mortar, the drug which is next higher in weight (say drug B, 1g); we add into the mortar that much of the second material which is approximately equal to the material in the mortar (500mg). We mix them and then we add the remaining quantity of B and mix them. Them we add the remaining drugs in order of increasing weights (say drug C, 2g;drug D 3g etc.). Each time we add an amount that is equal to the amount in the mortar. When we take the materials into the mortar in this way and mix them, we get very good mixing.
2.    Weighing :
After the material of the powder is prepared it is divided into individual doses. In weighing certain points are to be kept in mind. Today nobody is working in the imperial system; but if you are working in the imperial system 1 grain is the minimum that can be weighed and 2 grains are the minimum that
can be dispensed. In the metric system, by convention 100mg is the minimum that can be weighed and 200mg is the minimum that can be dispensed. If the final weight of a divided powder in coming out to be, say 750mg, we take it to the nearest 100,that is 800mg, by adding an inert diluent such as lactose to it. The final weight of a divided powder or bulk powder is not allowed to be in a fraction or a part of100mg.
3.    Packing :
The packing of powders in done in a very systematic and specific manner. Packs which are known as pharmacists packs are prepared by folding a neatly cut rectangular paper two times, each time keeping an edge. Then the final pack has a central portion and two flaps. After placing the powder in
the center of the pack, the flaps are closed such that one flap goes into the other.
4.    Dispensing :
An envelope is taken and is neatly labeled. Below a samplelabel is given.
Prescription No. 1
THE POWDER
3 DOSES
Take one dose when there is pain.
To,
Mr. P.Ajay,J. Vijaya Ratna,
26 years Pharmacist, Male Pedawaltair, Visakhpatnam.
Visakhpatnam.
Labeling particulars change with each prescription. When writing labels one should be very careful, no errors should be committed, because the patient follows the labelling instructions.
After neatly labeling the envelope the powders should be kept in the envelope and the envelope should be neatly sealed and dispensed.
Different
varieties of Powders:
1.    Bulk Powders for internal use:
When prescriptions contain large amounts of light drug substances they fall into this category. We prepare a bulk powder, pack the whole powder into one pack and send it with the instruction that
for every dose, the patient should take one teaspoonful of the Gregory’s powder NP whose formula is given below.
Formula :
Heavy Magnesium carbonate- 325 g
Light Magnesium Carbonate- 325 g
Rhubarb,in powder- 250 g
Ginger, in powder - 100 g
---------
1000g
--------- 
The Principle and the procedure are given in the last section where 15 prescriptions are discussed.
2.    Bulk powders for external use:
Dusting powders and insufflations come under this category.
Dusting powders are of two types:
a.    Medical:  
They are used for superficial skin conditions, they should not be used for application to open wounds or application or broken skin. The label should clearly specify this point. We need not sterilise the ingredients of these powders but we must be sure that they are not containing pathogens.
b.    Surgical:
These powders must be sterile because they are used in body cavities and are applied on wounds. They are sprayed on burnt areas and are placed on the umbilical cords of infants. These powders usually contain an antibacterial agent. The diluent is sterilizable maize starch, which is also called as
absorbable dusting powder.
c.    Insufflations:
These are fine powders which are used to produce either a local effect, such as in the treatment of ear or nose or throat infections or a systemic effect, such as when they are inhaled into the lungs and get absorbed from the lungs. If a drug is destroyed in the GIT, when it is taken orally, then making it into an insufflation is a good option.
In fact this formulation is coming back into wide use now, with the difference being that it is being manufactured in pharmaceutical companies with the aid of the latest technologies. Making a drug into a fine powder, packing it into containers called inhalers, seeing that the powder goes and lodges in the lungs and then releases the drug there involves a lot of technology. But if that can be managed, it is a good dosage form, because absorption of drug from the lungs is very fast, the lungs are highly perfused and the area offered for absorption is equal to the area of a tennis court! The diluent usually used for insufflation is lactose. Forpreparations meant for open wounds the diluent used is sterilisable
maize starch.
Divided Powders
Each dose of the powder is separately packed into a packet. The number of packets in the envelope is the number of packets ordered by the doctor. We usually proceed for 2 or 3 powders more than the
number ordered by the doctor, because some material may be wasted in triturations and weighing. If all the materials or drugs present in a powder are white in color, we usually add a drop of amaranth alcoholic solution to the powder and go on mixing it. The end point of the mixing would be the even spreading of the deep pink color of amaranth. If the final weight of the divided powder is less than 200mg, we add enough lactose as diluent to the whole mixture; such that the weight of
individual powder comes to 200mg. If liquids have to be made into free flowing powders, we add enough lactose to absorb the liquid on to it. We add enough lactose such that, when the final powder is divided into doses, each dose is more than 200mg and is also rounded to the nearesh 100mg.
If a powder contains a potent medicine such as in the case of codeine phosphate or Hyoscine hydrobromide we dilute them with lactose to bring them up to enough weight such that they can be dispensed.
If a powder contains a hygroscopic drug, the final powder is double wrapped.
If a powder contains materials that form a eutectic mixture the eutectic formation is allowed, and is absorbed onto a diluent the final powder is sent in a double wrapped condition.

If a powder contains an effervescent mixture, the acid and the alkaline salt are separately packed and dispensed with suitable directions.
Courtesy By pharmainfo.net

No comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe Now: poweredby

Powered by FeedBurner