Quantitative Evaluation of Aqueous Isopropanol Enhancement of Skin Flux of Terbutaline (Sulfate). I. Ion Associations and Species Equilibria in the Formulation

1992 
It has been reported previously that saturated terbutaline sulfate in aqueous isopropanol significantly enhances the terbutaline flux through human skin in vitro. This paper demonstrates that the effect of isopropanol on the permeant species in the formulation contributes to the flux enhancement. This demonstration is based on studies involving measurements of conductivity and pKa as well as NMR spectroscopy in isopropanol-water mixtures. Increasing isopropanol concentration inhibits the proton dissociation of terbutaline and results in the ion associations between the protonated terbutaline and its counterion, sulfate anion. The species present in the formulation include protonated terbutaline, the negatively charged terbutaline-sulfate (1:1) ion pair, and the neutral terbutaline-sulfate (2:1) ion triplet. The results of the studies provide the basis for a quantitative evaluation of the species equilibria in solutions of terbutaline sulfate. The saturated terbutaline sulfate in 60% isopropanol produces the maximum concentration of the neutral ion triplet. This result is almost parallel to the terbutaline skin flux, which maximized at 60–80% isopropanol.
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