-A solid Preparation each containing a single dose of one or more active ingredients and usually obtained by compressing uniform volumes of particles
Slide 2
Advantages of Tablets
Convenient
accurate
stable
Consistency
cheap
Slide 3
Disadvantages of Tablets
poorly soluble drugs
poor bioavailability
local irritation
harmful effects on GI tract
Slide 4
Types of tablets
Convential
Buccual
coated
effervescent
controlled released
Stamped
Scored
Sublingual
Slide 5
Official Tests
Content
Content uniformity
Reproducible drug release
Disintegration time
Dissolution rate
Friability/Hardness
Microbial Quality
Slide 6
Excipients: Ideal Properties
Non-toxic
Known Functionality
Inactive in physiological conditions
No idiosynchratic effects in the bodies
Stable
Reliable
Reproducable supply
Cheap/effective in cost
Tasteless, Colourless and odourless
Slide 7
Making Tablets
Powders compressed in a die
Top Punch Pushes down and compresses the contents of the powder into the die
Bottom punch ejects the contents of the Tablet out
Powder needs to be treated with excipients for it to be optimumly removed
Slide 8
Tablet Requirements
Flow must flow into the die in a reproducable manner
Particles must cohere to eachother to form the tablet under a compressive force
Tablet must be ejected from press with no
Cracks
Chips
Capping
Lamination
Disintegrant types include:
Water uptake facilitators
Tablet-rupture promoters
They cause the tablet to expand or rupture on contact with water, causing the tablet to break down
Polymers: Structure improves water access to the tablet, swelling and breaking result
Disintegrants can also react and form carbon dioxide gas bubbles, resulting in tablet rupture
Examples of a disintegrant include Pregelatenised starch, PVP cross linked and carboxymethylcellulose
Slide 11
Lubricants
Helps the compressed compact be released from the die safely
Too much lubricant reduces dissolution and/or tablet strength
Examples include magnesium stearate and talc