Effects of Manufacturing Conditions on Pharmaceutical Properties of Petrolatum Ointment-Distribution of Hydrocarbon

Chem Pharm Bull (Tokyo). 2021;69(4):352-359. doi: 10.1248/cpb.c20-00860.

Abstract

Petrolatum ointment, which is an oleaginous ointment, is generally produced through manufacturing processes such as melting, mixing, and cooling. In this type of semisolid formulation, the manufacturing conditions of each process are empirically known to affect the quality of the resultant preparation; however, in many cases, the details of the factors are unclear. To clearly investigate the influence of the pharmaceutical properties of petrolatum ointments, we manufactured several ointments while changing the conditions of the mixing and cooling process after melting white petrolatum. As a result, the temperature at the termination was determined to influence the pharmaceutical properties of the final product. To investigate these phenomena, each petrolatum ointment sample was examined via digital microscopy and laser Raman analysis, and the distribution of the liquid-solid parts of samples was investigated. The internal structure of the ointment sample manufactured at a mixing-stop temperature of 40 °C, the needle crystals and the spherical aggregates surrounding them appropriately coexisted, while the structure exhibited a state wherein the two were linked in a semisolid phase. Meanwhile, for the ointment sample manufactured under the lowest mixing-stop temperature of 25 °C, the liquid part and the spherical aggregates were clearly separated, indicating that the liquid part was easily separated from ointments. In addition, the distribution of the hydrocarbons among the samples was measured via GC-MS; no significant difference in chemical structure was observed. In conclusion, the internal structure of the petrolatum ointment was changed by the manufacturing conditions, and this affected the pharmaceutical properties.

Keywords: imaging; internal structure; manufacturing condition; ointment; pharmaceutical property; white petrolatum.

MeSH terms

  • Drug Compounding
  • Hydrocarbons / chemistry*
  • Ointments / chemistry*
  • Petrolatum / chemistry*
  • Rheology
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Hydrocarbons
  • Ointments
  • Petrolatum