Affinity of Luliconazole for Human Nail Derived Keratin
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- Hasuko Masayuki
- Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd.
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- Shiomi Ryo
- Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd.
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- Takahashi Yoshinori
- Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd.
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- Motoba Kazuhiko
- Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd.
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- Hirano Hirofumi
- Department of Dermatology, Tokyo Medical University
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- Tsuboi Ryoji
- Department of Dermatology, Tokyo Medical University
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- Inagaki Katsuhiro
- Nihon Nohyaku Co., Ltd.
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- ルリコナゾールのヒト爪由来ケラチンに対する親和性
- ルリコナゾール ノ ヒト ツメ ユライ ケラチン ニ タイスル シンワセイ
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Description
Affinity of Luliconazole (LLCZ), an antifungal drug used for topical treatment of onychomycosis in Japan, to nail keratin was demonstrated. Efinaconazole (EFCZ) was used as a reference drug. Drugs at fixed concentrations were added to 4 ml of buffer solution containing 40 mg of nail keratin powder prepared from healthy volunteers or from tinea unguium patients. The mixtures were shaken at 37℃, and adsorption and desorption rates of the drug in nail keratin were measured. Theoretical analysis using the Freundlich adsorption isotherm was applied to eliminate effects of testing conditions on the results. Results showed that compared with EFCZ, LLCZ exhibited high adsorption rates and low desorption rates in nail keratins. These results were verified by Freundlich analysis, in which adsorption coefficient (KadsF) and desorption coefficient (KadsF) of LLCZ were 5–7 times and about 2 times higher than EFCZ, respectively. In addition, antifungal activity against Trichophyton rubrum of the desorbed LLCZ samples was determined using disk diffusion assay. In conclusion, LLCZ is considered to possess high affinity to nail keratin. LLCZ, therefore, can be retained in the nail as a reservoir and continuously desorbed at the infection site to exhibit antifungal activity against pathogenic fungi. The pharmacokinetics of LLCZ in the nail is believed to differ from that of EFCZ. As adsorption and desorption rates of the two drugs in nail keratin tended to be different between healthy volunteers and patients, further detailed study is needed.
Journal
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- Medical Mycology Journal
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Medical Mycology Journal 58 (4), J113-J119, 2017
The Japanese Society for Medical Mycology
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Keywords
Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390282680374737152
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- NII Article ID
- 130006233736
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- NII Book ID
- AA12518136
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- ISSN
- 2186165X
- 21856486
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- NDL BIB ID
- 028625188
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- PubMed
- 29187718
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Article Type
- journal article
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- NDL Search
- Crossref
- PubMed
- CiNii Articles
- OpenAIRE
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed