Tablets
Tablets
Tablets
Definition
Definition according to the BP
Tablets are dosage forms that are circular in shape with
either flat or convex faces and prepared by compressing
the medicament or mixture of medicaments usually with
added substances
.By its composition, the coating is designed to rupture and expose the core
tablet at the desired location in the gastrointestinal tract.
GELATIN-COATED
TABLETS
Today, only a few tablet triturate products are available commercially, with
most of these produced by tablet compression.
Since tablet triturates must be readily and completely soluble in water, only
a minimal amount of pressure is applied during their manufacture.
The few tablet triturates that remain are used sublingually, such as
nitroglycerin tablets.
The required number of tablets was dissolved in a suitable vehicle, sterility attained, and
the injection performed.
The tablets were a convenience, since they could be easily carried in the physicians
medicine bag and injections prepared to meet the needs of the individual patients.
However, the difficulty in achieving sterility and the availability of prefabricated injectable
products, some in disposable syringes, have eliminated the need for hypodermic tablets.
DISPENSING TABLETS
Dispensing tablets are no longer in use.
They contain :
antibacterials for the treatment of nonspecific vaginitis
caused by Haemophilus vaginalis
antifungals for the treatment of vulvovaginitis candidiasis
caused by Candida albicans and related species.
INSTANTLY DISINTEGRATING OR
DISSOLVING TABLETS
Instant-release tablets (rapidly dissolving tablets, or RDTs) are
characterized by disintegrating or dissolving in the mouth within 1
minute, some within 10 seconds
Tablets of this type are designed for children and the elderly or for any
patient who has difficulty in swallowing tablets.
They liquefy on the tongue, and the patient swallows the liquid.
These tablets are prepared using very water- soluble excipients designed
to wick water into the tablet for rapid disintegration or dissolution. They
have the stability characteristics of other solid dosage forms.
The original fast-dissolving tablets were molded tablets for
sublingual use.
For use, they were simply placed under the tongue to provide
a rapid onset of action for drugs such as nitroglycerin.
Also, they have been used for drugs that are destroyed in the
gastrointestinal tract, such as testosterone, administered
sublingually for absorption to minimize the first-pass effect.
These RDTs are more convenient to carry and
administer than an oral liquid.
Packaging
They are generally packaged in cards or bubble-type packaging
with each individual tablet in its own cavity.
Not withstanding these advantages, there are a number
of disadvantages and difficulties associated with
formulating RDTs, including:
drug loading
taste masking
friability
manufacturing costs
stability of the product
COMPRESSED TABLETS
The physical features of compressed tablets are well known:
Round, oblong or unique in shape
thick or thin
large or small in diameter
flat or convex
unscored or scored in halves, thirds, or quadrants
engraved or imprinted with an identifying symbol and/or code number
coated or uncoated
colored or uncolored
one, two, or three layered.
Tablet diameters and shapes are determined by the die and
punches used in compression.
The less concave the punches, the flatter the tablets; conversely
The more concave the punches the more convex the resulting
tablets.
The volume of fill is adjusted with the first few tablets to yield the
desired weight and content.
During production, sample tablets are periodically removed for visual inspection and
automated physical measurement.
The USP contains a test for determination of dosage form uniformity by weight
variation for uncoated tablets.
In the test, 10 tablets are weighed individually and the average weight is calculated.
The tablets are assayed and the content of active ingredient in each of the 10 tablets is
calculated assuming homogeneous drug distribution.
2. Content Uniformity
By the USP method, 10 dosage units are individually assayed for their
content according to the method described in the individual
monograph.
.The degree of pressure affects not only thickness but also hardness of
the tablet; hardness is perhaps the more important criterion since it can
affect disintegration and dissolution.
4. Tablet Hardness and Friability
It is fairly common for a tablet press to exert as little as 3,000 and as much as
40,000lb of force
In production of tablets. Generally, the greater the pressure applied, the harder the
tablets, although the characteristics of the granulation also have a bearing on
hardness.
Certain tablets, such as lozenges and buccal tablets, that are intended to dissolve
slowly are intentionally made hard; other tablets, such as those for immediate drug
release, are made soft.
All USP tablets must pass a test for disintegration, which is conducted in
vitro using a testing apparatus.
The apparatus consists of a basket and rack assembly containing six open-
ended transparent tubes of USP-specified dimensions, held vertically upon a
10-mesh stainless steel wire screen.
Tablets must disintegrate within the times set in the individual monograph, usually 30
minutes, but varying from about 2 minutes for nitroglycerin tablets to up to 4 hours for
buccal tablets.
If one or more tablets fail to disintegrate, additional tests prescribed by the USP must be
performed.
Enteric-coated tablets are similarly tested, except that the tablets are tested in
simulated gastric fluid for 1 hour, after which no sign of disintegration, cracking, or
softening must be seen.
They are then actively immersed in the simulated intestinal fluid for the time stated in the
individual monograph, during which time the tablets disintegrate completely for a positive
test.
6. Tablet Dissolution
In vitro dissolution testing of solid dosage forms is important
for a number of reasons :
The system relates combinations of a drugs solubility (high or low) and its intestinal permeability
(high or low) as a possible basis for predicting the likelihood of achieving a successful in vivoin
vitro correlation (IVIVC).
Using this system, drugs are placed into one of four categories as follows:
2. Category II drug, dissolution may be the rate-limiting step for absorption, and an
IVIVC may be expected. - dissolution rate is slower than the rate of gastric emptying -
3. Category III drug (In the case of a high-solubility and low- permeability ), permeability
is the rate-controlling step, and only a limited IVIVC may be possible.
4. Category IV drug (low solubility and low permeability) significant problems are
likely for oral drug delivery
Tablet disintegration is the important first step to the dissolution of the drug in a tablet.
5. Avoid dustiness , The granulation of toxic materials will reduce the hazard of generation of toxic dust,
which may arise during the handling of the powders.
6. Materials, which are slightly hygroscope, may adhere & form a cake if stored as a powder.
7. Granules, being denser than the parent powder mix, occupy less volume per unit weight.
WET GRANULATION
Wet granulation is a widely employed method for the production of compressed
tablets.
One commercial brand of sodium starch glycolate is reported to swell up to 300% of its
volume in water
When starch is employed, 5% to 10% is usually suitable, but up to about 20% may be
used to promote more rapid tablet disintegration.
The total amount of disintegrant used is not always added in preparing the granulation.
Preparing the Damp Mass
A liquid binder is added to the powder mixture to
facilitate adhesion of the powder particles.
The degree to which the granules are reduced depends on the size of the punches to be used.
In general, the smaller the tablet to be produced, the smaller the granules.
Screens of 12- to 20-mesh size are generally used for this purpose.
Sizing of the granules is necessary so that the die cavities for tablet compression may be
completely and rapidly filled by the free-flowing granulation.
Voids or air spaces left by too large a granulation result in the production of uneven
tablets.
Adding Lubrication and Blending
After dry screening, a dry lubricant is dusted over the spread-out
granulation through a fine- mesh screen.
Technologic advances
now allow the entire
process of granulation
to be completed in a
continuous fluid bed
process, using a single
piece of equipment, the
fluid bed granulator.
The fluid bed granulator performs the following steps:
(a) preblending the formulation powder, including active
ingredients, fillers, and disintegrants, in a bed with
fluidized air
(b) granulating the mixture by spraying onto the fluidized
powder bed, a suitable liquid binder, such as an aqueous
solution of acacia, hydroxypropyl cellulose, or povidone
(c) drying the granulated product to the desired moisture
content.
Another method, microwave vacuum processing, also allows the powders to be:
mixed
wetted
agglomerated
dried within the confines of a single piece of equipment.
o The use of the microwave reduces the drying time considerably, often by one fourth.
o After adding lubricants and screening, the batch is ready for tablet formation or capsule filling.
Advantages of wet granulation
Advantages
Reduced segregation of formulation components during
storage and/or processing
Disadvantages
1. Often several processing steps are required
2. Solvents are required in the process: this leads to a
number of concerns:
.Drug degradation may occur in the presence of the
solvent
.The drug may be soluble in the granulation fluid
.Heat is required to remove the solvent
DRY GRANULATION
By the dry granulation method, the powder mixture
is compacted in large pieces and subsequently
broken down or sized into granules.
The slugs are broken up by hand or by a mill and passed through a screen
of desired mesh for sizing.
The compacted material is broken up, sized, and lubricated, and tablets are
prepared by compression in the usual manner.
4. The final tablets produced by dry granulation tend to be softer than those
produced by wet granulation
Glidants, such as
fumed silicon dioxide
Advantages and disadvantages of
direct compression
Advantages:
1. Low labour input
2. A dry process
3. Fewest processing steps
Disadvantages:
4. Stratification (layers) may occur due to differences in particle size and bulk density which
results poor content uniformity.
5. A large dose drug may cause problem in direct compression. It requires diluents. The tablet
becomes large in size which is difficult to swallow and also costly.
6. During handling of dry materials static charge may form which may present uniform distribution
of drug.
7. Direct compression diluent may interact with the drug. For example, amine drug with Lactose
produce discoloration of tablet
WET GRANULATION DRY GRANULATION DIRECT
COMPRESSION
1. Milling and mixing of 1. Milling and mixing of 1. Milling and
drugs and excipients drugs and excipients mixing of drugs
and excipients
2 .Preparation of binder 2. Compression into 2. Compression of
solution slugs or roll compaction tablet
3. Wet massing by 3. Milling and screening
addition of binder solution of slugs and compacted
or granulating solvent powder
4. Screening of wet mass 4. Mixing with
disintegrant/lubricant
5. Drying of the wet 5. Compression of tablet
granules
6. Screening of dry
granules
7. Blending with
disintegrant / lubricant
and
Compression process
Compression: The upper punch descends and enters the die and the
powder is compressed until a tablet is formed. During the compression
phase, the lower punch can be stationary or can move upwards in the die.
After maximum applied force is reached, the upper punch leaves the
powder
Ejection: During this phase, the lower punch rises until its tip reaches the
level of the top of the die. The tablet is subsequently removed from the die
and die table by a pushing device.
Tablet compression machine
1. Hopper for holding and feeding granulation to be compressed
6. Tablet ejector
Tablets Defects
Laminatio
n
Cappi
Sticking &
ng
Picking
Chippi
ng
Hardness Thicknes
Black
variation s
Spots
variation
1. Capping
Reason:
1. Air - entrapment during compression
2. Too much of hydrophobic lubricant e.g.: Magnesium-stearate
3. Rapid decompression
3. Sticking & Picking
Sticking is one of the most common problems of tablet making. It occurs
when granules attach and stick to the faces of the punches instead of
locking together to create a uniform tablet.
Sub coating After the tablets are waterproofed if needed, three to five
subcoats of a sugar-based syrup are applied. This bonds the sugar coating to
the tab- let and provides rounding. The sucrose and water syrup also contains
gelatin, acacia, or PVP to enhance coating.
Solvent
Environmental
Safety
Financial
Solvent residues
Film-coating solutions may be nonaqueous or aqueous.
5. Opaquants and colorants to make the appearance of the coated tablets handsome
and distinctive. Examples: Opaquant, titanium dioxide; colorant, FD&C or D&C dyes.
6. Sweeteners, flavors, and aromas to enhance the acceptability of the tablet by the
patient. Examples: sweeteners, saccharin; flavors and aromas, vanillin.
8. A volatile solvent to allow the spread of the other components over the tablets
while allowing rapid evaporation to permit an effective yet speedy operation.
Example: alcohol mixed with acetone.
One commercial water-based colloidal coating dispersion called
Aquacoat (FMC Corporation) contains a 30% ethyl cellulose
pseudolatex.
The low viscosity allows less water to be used in the coating dispersion,
requiring less evaporation and reducing the likelihood that water will
interfere with tablet formulation.
In addition, the low viscosity permits greater coat penetration into the
crevices of monogrammed or scored tablets.
3. Colorant and opacifier (2.5% to 8%). Examples: FD&C or D&C lakes and iron
oxide pigments.
Mannitol is about 70% as sweet as sucrose, with a cool feel in the mouth.
Mannitol 812.0mg