Solubility of a compound with fasciolicidal activity: evaluation of efficacy in vitro and experimentally on infected sheep with Fasciola hepatica
Main Article Content
Abstract
Compound alpha (ca) is a benzimidazolic derivate which has shown a high fasciolicidal efficacy when it is given by oral via. Solubilization of ca would be a suitable alternative to obtain an injectable formulation. The objectives of the present study were to evaluate the solubility of ca in order to determine the in vitro fasciolicidal efficacy and experimentally on infected ovines. The assays of solubility quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography (hplc), showed that beta-cyclodextrin (î’-cd) and hydroxi-propylbeta-cyclodextrin (hp-î’-cd) solubilized in 0.015% and 1.018% respectively. The solubilization for hp-î’-cd was calculated as 3.95% for 5.8 mg; 10.76% for hp-î’-cd with methanol, 39.048% for proylene-glycol (pg), 100% for glycerol formal (gf), and 100% for combined pg and gf and water in proportions of 3:2:5 and 3:2:4. In vitro evaluation using immature f. Hepatica showed that ca induced 100% efficacy 24 hours after solubilization with either gf or gf combined with pg and water. The efficacy in sheep was 56.4 and 68.4% at 1 and 2 mg/kg respectively; whereas 1 mg/kg of sulphoxide metabolite induced an efficacy of 73.9%. The hplc assays performed showed no evidence of the sulphoxide and sulphone metabolites. It is concluded that besides solubility and high in vitro fasciolicidal efficacy, the in vivo results in sheep showed only a moderate efficacy.
Keywords:
Compound ALPHA HPLC Ciclodextrins Vehicles Cosolvence
Article Details
License

Veterinaria México OA by Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
Based on a work at http://www.revistas.unam.mx
- All articles in Veterinaria México OA re published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC-BY 4.0). With this license, authors retain copyright but allow any user to share, copy, distribute, transmit, adapt and make commercial use of the work, without needing to provide additional permission as long as appropriate attribution is made to the original author or source.
- By using this license, all Veterinaria México OAarticles meet or exceed all funder and institutional requirements for being considered Open Access.
- Authors cannot use copyrighted material within their article unless that material has also been made available under a similarly liberal license.