Summary:
Within the framework of experimental work at the Department of Pharmaceutical Technology of
Slovak Medical University, “insect” chitin obtained from the buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris)
was processed to produce dosage forms and compared with commercially available chitin, or
chitosan, obtained from shrimps (Pandalus borealus). The paper aimed to find whether insect chitin,
or chitosan, possessed similar technological properties as commercially available and for topical
preparations used products. Samples were prepared containing chitin, or chitosan, of different
origin, 0.25 and 0.5 % in a gel base. In some gels the gel base was acidified with citric acid (in an
amount of 0.75 %) or lactic acid (1 %) to improve the mechanical properties of foils. All samples
were well applicable and after drying a relatively resistant transparent layer was formed on the skin.
All samples could be made to produce elastic foils, which after moistening clung well to the skin.
Both chitin and chitosan obtained from the bodies of buff-tailed bumblebees differed from reference
materials obtained from shrimps by the degree of deacetylation, possessed different technological
properties, e.g., finer fibres, were more fragile, and when wet, they could be disintegrated better,
which is obvious also from the results of microscopic evaluation. Chitosan prepared from chitin
SAV (insect) possessed substantially finer particles in the dosage form. The evaluation of the flow
properties of the prepared samples revealed that except Sample I (gel base alone) they are timedependent
tixotropic systems. Whereas chitin gels did not show any antimicrobial effect (which is Chitosan in topical preparations
Key words:
chitin – chitosan – insects – shrimp – topical dosage form
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