Literature DB >> 6864477

Permeation of skin and eschar by antiseptics I: baseline studies with phenol.

C R Behl, E E Linn, G L Flynn, C L Pierson, W I Higuchi, N F Ho.   

Abstract

To assess how the permeability of phenol is altered by thermal injury, it was first necessary to have baselines of comparison on normal skin. Using in vitro diffusion cells and the skin of the hairless mouse, [14C]phenol was applied to skin in an aqueous medium with a reference copermeating species, [3H]methanol, and 37 degrees permeability coefficients of the pair were evaluated as functions of animal age, skin hydration, stripping of the skin, dermis isolation, and phenol concentration. Age proved to be of little consequence to permeability over a wide age range. Prolonged aqueous soaking of the skins was also without much effect. Stripping of the skin and isolating the dermis by soaking techniques allowed assessment of individual skin strata diffusion resistances. When applied to skin in trace radiochemical concentrations, phenol behaved diffusionally as an alkanol with a chain length of six. But at concentrations greater than 2% w/v, phenol facilitated the permeation rates of itself and methanol; the effect was markedly concentration sensitive and only fractionally reversible. Concentration studies using silicone rubber membranes proved that the effects on the skin were the results of destroyed barrier integrity. At 6% phenol concentration there was an essentially instantaneous, 10-fold increase in the phenol permeability coefficient, raising it to two-thirds that observed with fully stripped skin. Overall, the data suggest that the stratum corneum is proportionally impaired as the phenol concentration is increased.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6864477     DOI: 10.1002/jps.2600720418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pharm Sci        ISSN: 0022-3549            Impact factor:   3.534


  4 in total

1.  Probing the effect of vehicles on topical delivery: understanding the basic relationship between solvent and solute penetration using silicone membranes.

Authors:  S E Cross; W J Pugh; J Hadgraft; M S Roberts
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2001-07       Impact factor: 4.200

2.  Permeation of water contaminative phenols through hairless mouse skin.

Authors:  A S Huq; N F Ho; N Husari; G L Flynn; W E Jetzer; L Condie
Journal:  Arch Environ Contam Toxicol       Date:  1986-09       Impact factor: 2.804

3.  Effect of vehicles on the maximum transepidermal flux of similar size phenolic compounds.

Authors:  Qian Zhang; Peng Li; David Liu; Michael S Roberts
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2012-08-25       Impact factor: 4.200

4.  Solvent interaction with polydimethylsiloxane membranes and its effects on benzocaine solubility and diffusion.

Authors:  K M Gelotte; R T Lostritto
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  1990-05       Impact factor: 4.200

  4 in total

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