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Ranitidine hydrochloride (RTD), a moisture-sensitive drug, has issues of stability during shelf life especially when formulated through wet granulation method. In current study, RTD was blended with non-hygroscopic excipient like ethyl cellulose and compressed using direct compression method. The physical and physicochemical characteristics were evaluated including hardness, thickness, diameter, friability, weight variation, disintegration, dissolution and accelerated stability study to optimize findings. Subsequently, the optimized formulation was characterized for Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) analysis and in vitro drug release kinetics. The physical characterization was unaffected by polymer variation while the friability and weight variation were within the USP limits. In vitro drug release depicted that the release rate was sustained by increasing the amount of ethyl cellulose, with a 10% increase of ethyl cellulose 99.09% drug was released. FTIR analysis exhibited no interaction among the ingredients of the optimized formulation (E2). The optimized formulation followed Hixson-Crowell release kinetics. Formulation A5 displayed immediate release characters as plain uncoated formulation. Accelerated studies showed no significant change in the drug content. The RTD was successfully sustained to be released up to 6 h and accelerated stability showed that the optimized formulation (E2) containing 4% starch 1500 and 10% of ethyl cellulose, respectively, was stable up to 6 months.
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Food Res Int
November 2025
Food Technology and Nutrition, School of Science, RMIT University, Melbourne 3083, VIC, Australia.
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Department of Veterinary Medicine, Central Animal Facility, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre, AIMS Health Sciences Campus, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Kochi, Kerala 682041, India.
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Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Jammu, Jammu 181221, Jammu and Kashmir, India. Electronic address:
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