1. Academic Validation
  2. Cryochemical Production of Drug Nanoforms: Particle Size and Crystal Phase Control of the Antibacterial Medication 2,3-Quinoxalinedimethanol-1,4-dioxide (Dioxidine)

Cryochemical Production of Drug Nanoforms: Particle Size and Crystal Phase Control of the Antibacterial Medication 2,3-Quinoxalinedimethanol-1,4-dioxide (Dioxidine)

  • Nanomaterials (Basel). 2021 Jun 17;11(6):1588. doi: 10.3390/nano11061588.
Tatyana I Shabatina 1 2 Yurii N Morosov 1 2 Andrey V Soloviev 1 Andrey V Shabatin 3 Olga I Vernaya 1 Michail Y Melnikov 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Chemistry, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gori Build 1/3, 119991 Moscow, Russia.
  • 2 Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Fundamental Sciences, Bauman Moscow State Technical University, 2nd Bauman Str. 5, 105905 Moscow, Russia.
  • 3 A.N. Frumkin Institute of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry RAS, Lenin Prospect, 31 Build 4, 119071 Moscow, Russia.
Abstract

Increasing the effectiveness of known, well-tested drugs is a promising low-cost alternative to the search for new drug molecular forms. Powerful approaches to solve this problem are (a) an active drug particle size reduction down to the nanoscale and (b) thermodynamically metastable but kinetically stable crystal modifications of drug acquisition. The combined cryochemical method has been used for size and structural modifications of the Antibacterial drug 2,3-quinoxalinedimethanol-1,4-dioxide (dioxidine). The main stage of the proposed technique includes the formation of a molecular vapor of the drug substance, combined with a carrier gas (CO2) flow, followed by a fast condensation of the drug substance and CO2 molecules on a cooled-by-liquid nitrogen surface of preparative cryostate. It was established that the molecular chemical structure of the drug substance remained unchanged during cryochemical modification; however, it led to a significant decrease of the drug particles' size down to nanosizes and changes in the crystal structures of the solid drug nanoforms obtained. Varying carrier gas (CO2) flow led to changes in their solid phase composition. A higher dissolution rate and changes in Antibacterial activity were demonstrated for cryomodified dioxidine samples in comparison to the properties of the initial pharmacopeia dioxidine.

Keywords

antibacterial drug dioxidine; cryochemical synthesis of nanocrystals; crystal structure modification; drug nanoforms; particle size reduction.

Figures
Products