| Literature DB >> 31618877 |
Angela Fabiano1, Anna Maria Piras2, Vincenzo Calderone3,4, Lara Testai5,6, Lorenzo Flori7, Dario Puppi8, Federica Chiellini9, Ylenia Zambito10,11.
Abstract
Osteoporosis, a systemic skeleton disease, can be prevented by increasing calcium levels in serum via administration of calcium salts. However, traditional calcium-based formulations have not appeared to be effective, hence the purpose of the present work has been to prepare and test in vitro/vivo a formulation able to gradually release calcium during transit over the GI tract, thus increasing bioavailability and reducing daily dose, and hence, side effects. Calcium controlled-release granules based on zeolite and Precirol® were prepared. In the best case, represented by granules sized 1.2 mm, containing 20% Precirol®, 19% zeolite, 60% calcium (granule), the release lasted ≈6 h. The release is controlled by diffusion of calcium ions through the aqueous channels forming within granules, once these come into contact with physiological fluids. Such a diffusion is hindered by the interaction of calcium ions with the negatively charged surface of the zeolite. Ovariectomy was used to make rats osteopenic. For in vivo studies, rats were divided into the following groups. Sham: not treated; ova: ovariectomized (ova); CaCl2 1.0 g: ova, treated with 1.0 g/die Ca2+; CaCl2 0.5 g: ova, treated with 0.5 g/die Ca2+; granule 1.0 g, or granule 0.5 g: ova, treated with granules equivalent to 1.0 g/die or 0.5 g/die Ca2+ in humans. Ca2+ amounts in femur bone and bone marrow, femur mechanical characteristics, and femur medullary canalicule diameter were measured and the same efficacy rank order was obtained: ova < CaCl2 0.5 g < CaCl2 1.0 g < granule 0.5 g ≈ granule 1.0 g ≈ sham. The results show promise of an effective prevention of osteoporosis, based on a controlled-rate administration of a calcium dose half that administered by the current therapy, with reduced side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium controlled release; Precirol® granules; calcium zeolite; femur mechanical characterization; femur morphological characterization; osteopenic rats
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31618877 PMCID: PMC6835288 DOI: 10.3390/nu11102467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Characteristics of granules.
| Code | Precirol % | Ca2+ % | Zeolite % | Talc % | Granule Size (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Z:P (80:20) 0.9 | 20 | 61 | 19 | 0.9 | |
| Z:P (50:50) 0.9 | 50 | 37.8 | 12.2 | 0.9 | |
| C:P (80:20) 0.9 | 20 | 80 | 0.9 | ||
| C:P (50:50) 0.9 | 50 | 50 | 0.9 | ||
| Z:P (80:20) 1.2 a | 20 | 61 | 19 | 1.2 | |
| Z:P (50:50) 1.2 | 50 | 37.8 | 12.2 | 1.2 | |
| C:P (80:20) 1.2 | 20 | 80 | 1.2 | ||
| C:P (50:50) 1.2 | 50 | 50 | 1.2 | ||
| (C+T):P (80:20) 1.2 | 20 | 61 | 19 | 1.2 |
a The formulation Z:P (80:20) 1.2 was used for the in vivo studies and named “Granule”.
Figure 1Ca2+ fraction released from granules immersed in simulated gastric fluid (SGF): (a) size, 0.9 mm; (b) size, 1.2 mm.
Figure 2Ca2+ fraction released from granules 1.2 mm size immersed, in sequence, in SGF, simulate jejunal fluid (SJF), and then in simulate large intestine environment (SLIE).
Figure 3Attenuated Total Reflectance-Fourier Transform InfraRed (ATR-FTIR) spectra of Z:P (80:20) 1.2 (GRANULE) and formulation components.
Bands H–O–H of hydration associated water. Signals for the: stretching (symmetrical, vs and asymmetrical, vas) of Si–O and C–H bonds; bending (symmetrical, δs and asymmetrical, δas) of C–H bond; stretching of ester carbonyl.
| Components | Hydration H2O | νas C–H, νs C–H | νs C=O | Hydration H2O | δas C–H | δs C–H | Silicate νas e νs Si–O | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zeolite | 3600 | 1632 | 1027 | 795 | ||||||
| Zeolite CaCl2 | 3400 | 1631 | 1027 | 795 | ||||||
| Precirol® | 3304 | 2955 | 2913 | 2848 | 1730 | 1471 | 1392 | |||
| Precirol® Zeolite | 3600 | 2955 | 2915 | 2849 | 1734 | 1634 | 1471 | 1392 | 1027 | 795 |
| Precirol® CaCl2 | 3403 | 2956 | 2914 | 2849 | 1734 | 1623 | 1471 | 1392 | ||
| GRANULE | 3400 | 2960 | 2916 | 2848 | 1735 | 1626 | 1470 | 1396 | 1020 | 798 |
Figure 4Ca2+ quantity (mg) per g of bone in rat femur. *p < 0.05 versus Ova Group.
Figure 5Ca2+ amount (mg) per g of bone marrow in rat femur. *p < 0.05 versus Ova Group.
Stiffness and breaking load data for rat femurs. Means ± SD.
| Rat Groups | Stiffness (N/mm) | Load Max (N) |
|---|---|---|
| Sham | 159 ± 17 | 107 ± 6 |
| Ova | 113 ± 24 | 93 ± 18 |
| Granule 0.5 g | 136 ± 38 | 106 ± 9 |
| CaCl2 0.5 g | 118 ± 51 | 101 ± 13 |
| Granule 1.0 g | 136 ± 19 | 101 ± 7 |
| CaCl2 1.0 g | 128 ± 11 | 93 ± 11 |
Figure 6SEM images of external surface of sham (A) and ova (B) rat femur.
Figure 7SEM images of inner rat femur: (A) sham; (B) ova; (C) CaCl2 0.5 g; (D) CaCl2 1.0 g; (E) Granule 0.5 g; (F) Granule 1.0 g.
Figure 8Canalicular diameters ± SD of rat femurs. *p < 0.05 versus Ova.
Figure 9Osteocalcin levels in the different experimental groups. *p < 0.05 versus sham.