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Phosphorylation of psyllium seed polysaccharide and its characterization.

Monica R P Rao, Deepa U Warrier, Snehal R Gaikwad, Prachi M Shevate
Other International journal of biological macromolecules 2016 69 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Type d'étude
In Vitro
Population
Psyllium polysaccharide (in vitro chemistry)
Intervention
Phosphorylation of psyllium seed polysaccharide and its characterization. phosphorylated psyllium polysaccharide
Comparateur
unmodified psyllium
Critère de jugement principal
physicochemical characterization
Direction de l'effet
Mixed
Risque de biais
Unclear

Abstract

Psyllium is widely used as a medicinally active natural polysaccharide for treating conditions like constipation, diarrhea, and irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis and colon cancer. Studies have been performed to characterize and modify the polysaccharide obtained from psyllium seed husk and to evaluate its use as a pharmaceutical excipient, but no studies have been performed to evaluate the properties of the polysaccharide present in psyllium seeds. The present study focuses on phosphorylation of psyllium seed polysaccharide (PPS) using sodium tri-meta phosphate as the cross-linking agent. The modified phosphorylated psyllium seed polysaccharide was then evaluated for physicochemical properties, rheological properties, spectral analysis, thermal analysis, crosslinking density and acute oral toxicity studies. The modified polysaccharide (PhPPS) has a high swelling index due to which it can be categorized as a hydrogel. The percent increase in swelling of PhPPS as compared to PPS was found to be 90.26%. The PPS & PhPPS mucilages of all strengths were found to have shear thinning properties. These findings are suggestive of the potential use of PhPPS as gelling & suspending agent. PhPPS was found to have a mucoadhesive property which was comparable with carbopol.

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