Search results for "Topical anti-inflammatory"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Topical anti-inflammatory potential of quercetin in lipid-based nanosystems: In vivo and in vitro evaluation

2013

Purpose: To develop quercetin-loaded phospholipid vesicles, namely liposomes and PEVs (Penetration Enhancer-containing Vesicles), and to investigate their efficacy on TPA-induced skin inflammation. Methods: Vesicles were made from a mixture of phospholipids, quercetin and polyethylene glycol 400 (PEG), specifically added to increase drug solubility and penetration through the skin. Vesicle morphology and self-assembly were probed by Cryo-Transmission Electron Microscopy and Small/Wide Angle X-ray Scattering, as well as the main physico-chemical features by Light Scattering. The anti-inflammatory efficacy of quercetin nanovesicles was assessed in vivo on TPA-treated mice dorsal skin by the d…

dermal fibroblastsmiceSkin AbsorptionAnti-Inflammatory AgentsDrug Evaluation PreclinicalPharmaceutical ScienceInflammationPharmacologyAdministration Cutaneousquercetinchemistry.chemical_compoundX-Ray DiffractionIn vivoskin inflammationmedicineAnimalsheterocyclic compoundsPharmacology (medical)PharmacologyDrug CarriersLiposomevesiclesintegumentary systemVesiclefungiOrganic Chemistry3T3 CellsPenetration (firestop)In vitrochemistryLiposomesNanoparticlesMolecular MedicineFemaleTopical anti-inflammatorymedicine.symptomQuercetinBiotechnology
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Topical Anti-Inflammatory Lignans from Haplophyllum hispanicum Haplophyllum hispanicum

1996

The present paper reports the results of the methanol extract of Haplophyllum hispanicum Spach on single or repeated local 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol acetate (TPA) administration and in the oxazolone-induced contact-delayed hypersensitivity mouse ear edemas. Two topical anti-inflammatory aryl naphthalide lignans were isolated from the active fractions of the methanol extract. They were identified by spectroscopic methods, including 13C NMR and heteronuclear multiple bond correlation (HMBC), as diphyllin acetyl apioside and tuberculatin. The former was the most active on acute TPA edema with a ID50 of 0.27 μmol/ear

chemistry.chemical_compoundHeteronuclear moleculechemistryStereochemistryEdemaArylmedicineDiphyllin acetyl apiosidemedicine.symptomCarbon-13 NMRTopical anti-inflammatoryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyZeitschrift für Naturforschung C
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