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      Pluronic microemulsions as nanoreservoirs for extraction of bupivacaine from normal saline.

      Journal of the American Chemical Society
      Bupivacaine, chemistry, isolation & purification, Caprylates, Emulsions, Fatty Acids, Oils, Poloxamer, Sodium Chloride, Surface-Active Agents, Water

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          Abstract

          We hypothesized that custom-designed microemulsions would effectively scavenge compounds from bulk media. Pluronic-based oil-in-water microemulsions were synthesized that efficiently reduced the free concentration of the local anesthetic bupivacaine in 0.9% NaCl. Both the molecular nature and concentration of the constituents in the microemulsions significantly affected extraction efficiencies. Pluronic F127-based microemulsions extracted bupivacaine more efficiently than microemulsions synthesized using other Pluronic surfactants (L44, L62, L64, F77, F87, F88, P104). Extraction was markedly increased by addition of fatty acid sodium salts due to greater oil/water interface area, increased columbic interaction between bupivacaine and fatty acids sodium salt, and greater surface activity. These data suggest that oil-in-water microemulsions may be an effective agent to treat cardiotoxicity caused by bupivacaine or other lipophilic drugs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          15099093
          3606560
          10.1021/ja0394479

          Chemistry
          Bupivacaine,chemistry,isolation & purification,Caprylates,Emulsions,Fatty Acids,Oils,Poloxamer,Sodium Chloride,Surface-Active Agents,Water

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