Pharmaceutics (Feb 2020)

Omega-3 Self-Nanoemulsion Role in Gastroprotection against Indomethacin-Induced Gastric Injury in Rats

  • Osama A. A. Ahmed,
  • Usama A. Fahmy,
  • Rana Bakhaidar,
  • Mohamed A. El-Moselhy,
  • Solomon Z. Okbazghi,
  • Al-Shaimaa F. Ahmed,
  • Asmaa S. A. Hammad,
  • Nabil A. Alhakamy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12020140
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 140

Abstract

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Peptic ulcer disease is an injury of the alimentary tract that leads to a mucosal defect reaching the submucosa. This study aimed to formulate and optimize omega-3 oil as a self-nanoemulsifying drug delivery system (SNEDDS) to achieve oil dispersion in the nano-range in the stomach to augment omega-3 oil gastric ulcer protection efficacy. Three SNEDDS components were selected as the design factors: the concentrations of the oil omega-3 (X1, 10−30%), the surfactant tween 20 and Kolliphor mixture (X2, 20−40%), and the cosurfactant transcutol (X3, 40−60%). The mixture experimental design proposed twenty-three formulations with varying omega-3 SNEDDS formulation component percentages. The optimized omega-3 SNEDDS formula was investigated for gastric ulcer protective effects by evaluating the ulcer index and by the determination of gastric mucosa oxidative stress parameters. Results revealed that optimized omega-3-SNEDDS achieved significant improvement in the gastric ulcer index in comparison with pure omega-3 oil. Histopathological findings confirmed the protective effect of the formulated optimized omega-3 SNEDDS in comparison with omega-3 oil. These findings suggest that formulation of omega-3 in the form of a SNEDDS would be more effective in gastric ulcer protection than the administration of omega-3 as a crude oil.

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