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Received January 19, 1997; accepted April 8, 1997
The current analysis of gastrointestinal absorption phenomena relies on the concept of homogeneity. However, drug dissolution, transit and uptake in the gastrointestinal tract are heterogeneous processes since they take place at interfaces of different phases under variable stirring conditions. Recent advances in physics and chemistry demonstrate that the geometry of the environment is of major importance for the treatment of heterogeneous processes. In this context, the heterogeneous character of in vivo drug dissolution, transit and uptake is discussed in terms of fractal concepts. Based on this analysis, drugs are classified in accordance with their gastrointestinal absorption characteristics into two broad categories i.e. homogeneous and heterogeneous. The former category includes drugs with satisfactory solubility and permeability which ensure the validity of the homogeneous hypothesis. Drugs with low solubility and permeability are termed heterogeneous since they traverse the entire gastrointestinal tract and therefore are more likely to exhibit heterogeneous dissolution, transit and uptake. The high variability of whole bowel transit and the unpredictability of conventional dissolution tests for heterogeneous drugs are interpreted on the basis of the fractal nature of these processes under In vivo conditions. The implications associated with the use of strict statistical criteria in bioequivalence studies for heterogeneous drugs are also pointed out.
KEY WORDS: gastrointestinal absorption; fractal; fractal kinetics; heterogeneity; bioequivalence.
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Most research in gastrointestinal (GI) absorption is based on the concept of homogeneity, that is, the description of average behavior. Some of the most often used paradigms are those borrowed from chemical engineering literature to model hydrodynamics, permeability, and absorption. For example, in the field of dissolution testing, a well stirred (homogeneous) dissolution medium is used to mimic the in vivo conditions (1). Calculations associated with the effective intestinal permeability or the unstirred water layer thickness in permeability studies assume that the hydrodynamics of the solution in the intestinal segment obeys the well-stirred model (2). The tank and tube models, often used for the analysis of drug dissolution and uptake in the GI tract (3-5), are accompanied with the assumptions of perfect mixing and homogeneous flow, respectively.
One can argue, however, that the assumptions of homogeneity and well stirred media are not only not obvious,...