GB2097681A - Water-soluble dressings containing medicament - Google Patents

Water-soluble dressings containing medicament Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2097681A
GB2097681A GB8212483A GB8212483A GB2097681A GB 2097681 A GB2097681 A GB 2097681A GB 8212483 A GB8212483 A GB 8212483A GB 8212483 A GB8212483 A GB 8212483A GB 2097681 A GB2097681 A GB 2097681A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
laminate
sterile
medicament
dressing
sheets
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Granted
Application number
GB8212483A
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GB2097681B (en
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Smith and Nephew PLC
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Smith and Nephew Associated Companies PLC
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Priority to GB8212483A priority Critical patent/GB2097681B/en
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L15/00Chemical aspects of, or use of materials for, bandages, dressings or absorbent pads
    • A61L15/16Bandages, dressings or absorbent pads for physiological fluids such as urine or blood, e.g. sanitary towels, tampons
    • A61L15/42Use of materials characterised by their function or physical properties
    • A61L15/46Deodorants or malodour counteractants, e.g. to inhibit the formation of ammonia or bacteria
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L2300/00Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices
    • A61L2300/20Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices containing or releasing organic materials
    • A61L2300/202Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices containing or releasing organic materials with halogen atoms, e.g. triclosan, povidone-iodine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L2300/00Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices
    • A61L2300/20Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices containing or releasing organic materials
    • A61L2300/204Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices containing or releasing organic materials with nitrogen-containing functional groups, e.g. aminoxides, nitriles, guanidines
    • A61L2300/206Biguanides, e.g. chlorohexidine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61LMETHODS OR APPARATUS FOR STERILISING MATERIALS OR OBJECTS IN GENERAL; DISINFECTION, STERILISATION OR DEODORISATION OF AIR; CHEMICAL ASPECTS OF BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES; MATERIALS FOR BANDAGES, DRESSINGS, ABSORBENT PADS OR SURGICAL ARTICLES
    • A61L2300/00Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices
    • A61L2300/40Biologically active materials used in bandages, wound dressings, absorbent pads or medical devices characterised by a specific therapeutic activity or mode of action
    • A61L2300/404Biocides, antimicrobial agents, antiseptic agents

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Hematology (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Epidemiology (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Medicinal Preparation (AREA)
  • Acyclic And Carbocyclic Compounds In Medicinal Compositions (AREA)

Abstract

A water soluble conformable dressing which can dissolve to release medicament when placed on a moist wound comprises a sterile laminate of two sheets of film forming material between which is located the medicament.

Description

SPECIFICATION Sterile dressing and preparation thereof This invention relates to a sterile dressing suitable for use on wounds and to its preparation. More particularly this invention relates to a sterile dressing of the type comprising a water soluble conformable sheet which when placed on a moist wound dissolves to release a medicament and to the preparation of such a dressing.
Topical creams containing medicaments are often applied to wounds but these are normally applied by rubbing with a gloved hand or by spreading with a pallet knife which can cause pain particularly in large wounds and especially with burns. Medicated occlusive dressing have also been widely used but these also have the disadvantages of being difficult to remove, do not permit sufficient air contact with the wound and may cause maceration of healing tissue.
Further, an indeterminate amount of medicament agent is applied to the wound.
In an attempt to overcome the problems of using creams in general, dressings applicable in the form of a water soluble sheet material have been described. US Patent No. 3,328,259 describes the use of certain water soluble cellulose derivatives as wound dressings. However preparing such dressings in sterile form is difficult unless full aseptic assembly is envisaged.
British Patent No. 1,471,013 and US Patent No.
3,969,498 teach the use of a dextran polymer to provide an aerated, water soluble plasma soluble dressing containing a medicament agent. However it was not said to be possible to prepare a sterile dressing by terminal sterilisation. The inventors of the aforementioned patents have subsequently described how their invention may be used to prepare effective dry foams (see Journal of Pharmaceutical Siciences 1974 63 (9) p.1483-4).
British Patent No. 1521171 discloses the use of an insoluble acrylonitrile-dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate copolymer membrane with a medicament dispersed in it as a burn wound covering. Whilst this membrane is permeable to water vapour and air it is not soluble and hence will not rapidly release medicament when placed on the moist wound.
Such known dressings have apparently been difficult to provide in sterile form and it is now thought that this in many cases is due to degradation of the medicament or film material on sterilisation.
British Patent No. 1108837 discloses water soluble films in which a local anaesthetic agent is finely distributed within one layer while the other layer is free thereof. No suggestion was made that the local anaesthetic could be anywhere other than distributed within one of the layers. United States Patent Nos. 4,128,445 and 4,197,289 disclose oral dosage units comprising two layers of an edible, water soluble or water dispersible web laminated together in which the medicament is loaded onto an internal surface of one of the layers. However, there is no disclosure of sterile laminates of this type or to their use as wound dressings.
Clearly it would be of advantage to provide a sterile, water soluble, conformable dressing which would dissolve to release medicament when placed on a moist wound which dressing could be prepared without recourse to full aseptic assembly techniques and which could be adapted to employ a number of different medicaments. Such a dressing has now been discovered.
The present invention provides a water-soluble, conformable dressing which can dissolve to release medicamentwhen placed on a moist wound characterised in that said dressing comprises a sterile laminate of two sheets of film forming material between which is located the medicament.
The film forming materials employed in this invention may be any pharmaceutically acceptable material which forms water-soluble, conformable sheets. Suitable materials include polyvinyl alcohols, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, sodium carboxymethylcellulose, hydroxypropyl-cellulose, methylcel lulose, ethylcellulose or mixtures thereof or other water soluble materials such as those set forth in the aforementioned patents.
Preferred film forming material includes polyvinyl alcohol. Herein the term polyvinyl alcohol is included not only polyvinyl alcohol per se but partially acetylated polyvinyl alcohol. Aptly the polyvinyl alcohol employed in this invention contains 10% to 33% of acetylated hydroxyl groups, more suitably 15% to 25% of acetylated hydroxyl groups and preferably 10% to 22% of acetylated hydroxyl groups. Aptly the polyvinyl alcohol employed in this inventiion has a molecular weight of from 15,000 to 120,000, more suitably from 20,000 to 100,000, and preferably from 25,000 to 85,000.
Apt polyvinyl alcohols are Gohsenol GM14 and Gohsenol GL05 mady by Nippon Gohsei and available from British Traders and Shippers Limited.
Gohesenol GM14 has a molecular weight of 83,000 and a degree of hydrolysis of 87% to 89%. Gohsenal GL05 has a molecular weight of 30,000 and a degree of hydrolysis of 87% to 89%.
Gohsenol GL05 is the preferred polyvinyl alcohol.
The water soluble sheet material will generally contain from 1 to 50% of plasticizer, more suitably from 5 to 40% of plasticizer and favourably from 10 to 25% of plasticizer.
The plasticizer employed in the sheet material will normally be water, an alcohol or mixture thereof.
Frequently the sheet material will contain up to 25% water, more usually 1 to 20% water and commonly 2 to 10% water. The alcohol employed will usually be a di- or strip hydroxylic compound such as ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, tetramethylene glycol, glycerol or the like. Favoured alcohols include propylene glycol and glycerol of which glycerol is normally preferred. Frequently the sheet material will contain 1 to 25% of the alcohol, more usually 1 to 20% of the alcohol and favourably 8 to 15% of the alcohol.
Suitable sheets of film forming material can have a weight per unit area of 10 to 125 g/m2 and preferably a weight per unit area of 15 to 50 glum2.
The sheet of film forming material can be a film of substantially uniform thickness or a film with thinner areas. Suitable films can have a thickness of 10 to 125 microns and preferably a thickness of 12.5 to 50 microns.
A favoured sheet of film forming material is polyvinyl alcohol (Gohsenol GL05) film of approximately 25 micron thickness containing 5 to 15% by weight of a glycerol plasticiser.
However in another aspect at least one of the sheets of the sterile laminate of the invention can have thinner areas to aid dispersal of the sheet in water such thinner areas are preferably in the form of recesses arranged in a uniform pattern on one or both surfaces of the sheet. Suitable recesses include grooves which may be interconnected, for example intersecting sets of straight parallel grooves arranged in a grid pattern and depressions, which may be discrete, of for example triangular, rectangular, circular or a like geometric shape.
A favoured sheet of film forming material having thinner areas is a polyvinyl alcohol (Gohsenal GL05) film (weight per unit area of approximately 24 gum2) containing 5% to 15% be weight of glycerol with a uniform pattern of triangular shaped depressions on one surface.
The use of such patterned films can reduce the 'blocking' of the laminate surfaces with other layers for example during production or within the pack.
The medicament employed is normally a curative agent which is topically effective. One particular class of curative agents envisaged for use in this invention are the topically applicable anti-infective agents. Such agents include chlorhexidine salts such as the gluconate, acetate, hydrochloride orthe like; silver salts such as silver sulphadiazine; iodophors such as polyvinylpyrrolidone-iodine or the like; or other topically acceptable antibacterial agent.Other topically acceptable medicaments include antiinflammatory agents such as steroids, for example cortisone, hydrocortisone, fludrocortisone, dexamethasone, fluoromethalone, prednisolone, triamcinolone, betamethasone, flumethasone, fluocinolone, methylprednisolone, trimeloxone, medrysone, hydrocortisone acetate, betamethasone valerate, betamethasone propionate, betamethasone benzoate, fluocinolone acetate, triamcinolone acetonide, prednisolone acetate or the like. Preferred medicaments for use in this invention are povidone iodine, chlorohexidine acetate and silver sulphadiazine It is preferred that the medicament is a powder.
Suitable powders have a mean particle size of 1 micron to 500 microns and preferably have a mean particle size of 2 microns to 300 microns, for example 5 microns to 250 microns. Granulated powders can also be used.
Favoured povidone iodine powders include grades 30,06 and 17;12 manufactured by BASF and presently available from Blagden Chemicals Limited.
Grades 30106 and 1712 have a mean particle size of between 10 and 200 microns, Grade 30/06 has an average molecular weight of 40,000 and an available 12 content of 1 to 12% and Grade 17112 has an average molecular weight of 12,000 and an available 12 content of 9 to 12%. Micronised powders of these grades having a particle size of less than 10 microns are also suitable.
Afavoured chlorohexidine acetate powder has a mean particle size of 10 microns, A favoured silver sulphadiazine powder has a mean particle size of 2 to 5 microns.
As previously indicated the medicament will be located between the soluble sheets of film forming material. Normally the medicament will form 0.1% to 25% of the dressing and more usually from 0.5 to 15% of the dressing.
Generally antibacterial agents will be present by at least 0.1% and usually be at least 2% of the dressing.
Generally the steroids will be present by not more than 10% and usually not more than 2% ofthe dressing.
It is desirable that the medicament is distributed evenly over the operative area of the dressing. This may be done most easily by an even distribution of spots, lines or other pattern of medicament. A continuous coating over the operative area of the dressing may also be employed especially if said operative area does not comprise the whole of the dressing.
The medicament may be located on the surface of a flat sheet of film forming material or on the surface of indentations in an indented sheet of film forming material.
The actual pattern of medicament is relatively unimportant as long as it achieves an even distribution of medicament over the wound when the dressing dissolves.
Often the medicament will be located on 5 to 80% of the surface area of the sheet, more usually 10 to 70% favourably 20 to 60% and preferably 25 to 50% of the surface area of the sheet. The medicament will disperse throughout the wound on dissolution ofthe film forming material.
Methods of locating the medicament include printing onto a flat surface, filling into an indented surface, distributing over a flat surface using a template having a pattern of holes or the like.
A favoured method of locating the medicament comprises printing a sheet of film forming material with a uniform pattern of spots by contacting the sheet against a roller having a corresponding pattern of depressions on its circumferential surface filled with medicament powder. The roller depressions can be conveniently filled by means of coating head trough.
Preferably the roller surface has a pattern of depressions or a series of repeat pattern of depressions of a size which matches that of the desired dressing.
In the case of potent medicaments an acceptable diluent may be included if desired.
Suitable water soluble polymer fims can be made by hot melt extrusion or by casting an aqueous solution of the polymer onto a release surface or the like. Polyvinyl alcohol films can be conveniently made by casting a 4% to 35% usually 5% to 20% by weight aqueous solution of the polymer in conventional manner for example by means of a doctor blade over flat bed coating head onto a polyethylene coated paper and then drying in an oven at approximately 85"C. A favoured polyethylene coated paper is known as Steralease 15 made by Sterling Coated Papers Limited.
Suitable water soluble films having thinner areas can be made by casting the polymer, as a solution or a hot melt, against a surface having a pattern of raised areas. These films can also be made heat embossing a plain film with similar patterned surface.
An apt process of forming such films comprises casting an aqueous solution of polymer in contact with a sheet embossed with uniform pattern of raised areas.
A favoured process of forming a polyvinyl alcohol film with thinner areas comprises casting an aqueous solution of polyvinyl alcohol (30% by weight of Gohsenol GL05) containing a plasticiser (5% to 15% by weight of glycerol) by means of doctor blade over flat bed coating head onto a film embossed with a uniform pattern of raised triangles (polyethylene film type 04514 emboss code 14 available from A O E Plastics GmbH).
In another aspect the invention provides a process of making a sterile laminate of the invention which comprises laminating two sheets of film forming material with a medicament located between said sheets.
The two sheets of film forming material in the sterile laminates of the invention can be bonded together over substantially the whole of their surfaces. However, it is preferred that the medicament is located in unbonded areas of the laminate.
In a preferred aspect of the sterile laminates of the invention the medicament is located in discrete areas between bonded areas of the laminate. Such bonding prevents the medicament moving to other areas of the laminate and thus maintains the even distribution of the medicament over the operative area of the dressing.
Afavoured sterile laminate of the invention has a uniform pattern of spots of medicament at unbonded areas of the laminate located between a pattern of square grid bonded areas.
The two sheets of film forming material may be laminated together in any convenient manner, for example by solvent welding (for example with a plasticizer as herein before described), heat sealing, pressure sealing, or adhesive bonding. One of the great advantages of using polyvinyl alcohol as the film forming material is that it has now been found possible to pressure seal the two layers together to form a laminate. Suitable adhesives include pressure sensitive adhesives, water and solvent based adhesives and hot melt adhesives. Preferred adhesives are water soluble or water dispersible pressure sensitive adhesives.
A preferred method of forming a sterile laminate of the invention comprises printing a film of polyvinyl alcohol with a thin layer of water and laminating the printed film under pressure to a film of polyvinyl alcohol with medicament thereon.
Desirably during the laminating process the relative arrangement of the two polyvinyl alcohol films is such that the water printed areas on one film does not coincide with medicament coated areas on the other film so that the medicament is located in discrete areas between bonded areas of the laminate.
In a favoured process a film of polyvinyl alcohol is printed with a square grid pattern of water and laminated under pressure to a film of polyvinyl alcohol coated with a uniform pattern of medicament spots so that spots of medicament are located within square grid bonded areas of the laminate. The polyvinyl alcohol film can be printed with a square grid pattern of water by contacting the film under pressure against a roller having a corresponding square grid pattern of flat topped ridges on its circumferential surface which are supplied with a thin layer of water by a conventional series contrarotating feed rollers from a water trough.
The dressing of this invention will generally be from 40 to 250 microns, more usually from 75 to 150 microns and preferably 80 to 120 microns, for example 100 microns thick. The two layers of film forming materials will generally be about half the aforementioned thicknesses.
In a continuous process the laminate can be formed into strip which can be cut into dressings of suitable size.
The dressings can be individually packed into sealed bacteria-proof packs. Suitable packs include pouches made of paper or like ethylene oxide permeable material and pouches made of aluminium foil laminates.
Such aluminium foil laminate pouches can be made by heat sealing two layers of a suitable aluminium foil laminate in a conventional manner.
Suitable heat sealable aluminium foil laminate for example a paper/aluminium foil/ethylene vinyl acetate lacquer laminate are available from DRG Flexible Packaging Limited. The laminate dressing can be sterilised within the bacteria-proof pack to form the sterile laminate of the invention.
The laminate dressing within the bacteria-proof pack can be sterilised by ethylene oxide (when the pack is permeable to ethylene oxide) or gamma irradiation in a conventional manner.
The dressings can have a suitable size and shape for the treatment of wound areas. Suitably dressings have a rectangular shape and are from 5 cm to 10 cm in the length or width dimension, typically 10 cm x 10 cm, cm x 7.5 cm, and 5 cm x 5 cm.
The separation of the medicament from the matrix of the sheets of film forming material reduces interaction of the components which would other wise occur on sterilisation. As previousl y indicated this allows a number of medicaments and film forming substances to be employed in combination which would not otherwise be practicable. Afurther advantage of this separation of the components of the dressing in this manner is that each of the components can be sterilised separately in conventional manner and the dressing fabricated uner aseptic conditions during the last stages only rather than having to carefully maintain sterility at all stages of manufacture. Many of the dressings of this invention can be terminally sterilised by 2.5Mrad radiation which is yet another advantage.
The following Examples illustrate the invention.
Example 1 A 10% by weight aqueous solution of polyvinyl alcohol (Gohsenol GM14) was cast into a polyethylene coated paper (Steralease 15) by a doctor blade over flat bed coating head and dried at 85"C for 5 minutes in an oven to give a 25 micron thick 10cm wide strip of polyvinyl alcohol film with a residual water content of approximately 6%. The upper surface of the film had a glossy surface.
Micronised chlorhexidine acetate (mean particle size 100 microns) was distributed on to the glossy surface of a 1 Ocm wide strip of polyvinyl alcohol film as a spaced series of 4 x 3 pattern of dots 1cm in diameter and 1cm apart by means of a plastic template having a pattern of approximately circular holes 1cm in diameter. A 1 Ocm wide strip of 35 micron thick polyvinyl alcohol film (glossy surface) was then laminated to the chlorhexidine acetate coated film by passage through the nip of rubber rollers under pressure. The strip was cut into 1 Ocm x 8 cm dressing which were packed into sealed aluminium foil pouches and sterilised by gamma irradiation (2.5 mega rads) in a conventional manner.
The water soluble dressing contained approximately 0.07 grams of chlorhexidine acetate fixed in place between two sealed polyvinyl alcohol films as a pattern of 4 x 3 dots 1 cm in diameter and 1 cm apart with 1 cm sealed medicament free margin around the edge of the dressing.
Example 2 A soluble film laminate dressing was made in the same manner as Example 1 using povidone iodine powder (mean particle size 200 microns) instead of chlorhexidine acetate.
Example 3 A soluble film laminated dressing was made in the same manner as Example 1 using micronised silver sulphadiazine (mean particle size 2 microns to 5 microns) instead of chlorhexidine acetate.
Example 4 A 10 cm wide strip of polyvinyl alcohol film (thickness 25 microns) containing a glycerol plasti ciser (10% by weight) was prepared in the same manner as example 1 using a 30% aqueous solution of polyvinyl alcohol (Gohsenal GL05).
Povidone iodine powder (grade 30/06) was printed onto the glossy surface of the polyvinyl alcohol strip in the form of spots by pressure contact with a printing roller. The printing roller had a repeat pattern of 9 x 7 square shallow depressions (0.7 cm square) arranged in parallel rows (centres 1 cm apart) on its circumferential surface. The print roller, its depressions filled with powder by means of a coating head, transferred a corresponding pattern of spots onto the polyvinyl alcohol strip.
A second 10 cm wide strip of polyvinyl alcohol, printed with water in a square grid pattern (1 cm squares), was laminated under pressure by nip rollers to the coated polyvinyl alcohol strip so that the povidone-iodine powder was located between the two strips. The water print roller had a square grid pattern (1 cm square) of flat topped ridges which were coated with a thin layer of water by contact with rotating roller which in turn was in contact with contra-rotating water pick up roller partially immersed in a water trough.
The relationship between the printed patterns on polyvinyl alcohol strips before lamination was arranged so that the spots of povidone-iodine powder after lamination were located between bonded areas of the polyvinyl alcohol film laminate strip.
The strip laminate was cut into 10 cm x 7.5 cm dressings which were individually packed into sealed aluminium foil laminate pouches and sterilised by gamma irradiation (2.5 megarads) in a conventional manner. The aluminium foil pouches were formed by heat sealing a front foil consisting of a bonded laminate of paper (40 glm2)/aluminium foil (24 g/m2)/ethylene-vinyl acetate (23g/m2 of Suryln 1652) and a back aluminium foil laminate of similar construction coated with a heat seal pealable lacquer (25 g/m2) available from DRG Flexible Packaging Limited.
The water soluble dressing contained approximately 10% by weight of povidone iodine located between the polyvinyl alcohol films as a pattern of 7 x 9 spots arranged in parallel rows (centres approximately 1 cm apart), surrounded by a grid pattern of bonded areas of the laminate.

Claims (14)

1. A water soluble conformable dressing which can dissolve to release medicament when placed on a moist wound characterised in that said dressing comprises a sterile laminate of two sheets of film forming material between which is located the medicament.
2. A sterile laminate as claimed in claim 1 within a sealed bacteria proof pack.
3. A sterile laminate as claimed in either of claims 1 or 2 in which the film forming material comprises a polyvinyl alcohol containing 10% to 22% acetylated hydroxyl groups.
4. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3 in which the medicament is a powder.
5. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4 in which the medicament comprises a topically acceptable antibacterial agent.
6. A sterile laminate as claimed in claim 5 in which the antibacterial agent is a chlorhexidine salt.
7. A sterile laminate as claimed in claim 5 in which the antibacterial agent is polyvinyl pyrrolidone iodine.
8. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 7 in which the medicament forms 0.5% to 15% by weight of the dressing.
9. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 8 in which the medicament is distributed evenly over the operative area of the dressing.
10. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 9 in which the two sheets of the laminate are bonded together.
11. A sterile laminate as claimed in claim 10 in which the medicament is located in discrete areas between bonded areas of the laminate.
12. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 11 in which the dressing has a thickness of 75 to 150 microns.
13. A sterile laminate as claimed in any of claims 1 to 12 in which at least one of the sheets has thinner areas to aid dispersal of the sheet in water.
14. A process of making a sterile laminate as described in claims 1 to 13 which comprises laminating two sheets of film forming material with a medicament located between said sheets.
GB8212483A 1981-05-02 1982-04-29 Water-soluble dressings containing medicament Expired GB2097681B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8212483A GB2097681B (en) 1981-05-02 1982-04-29 Water-soluble dressings containing medicament

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8113624 1981-05-02
GB8212483A GB2097681B (en) 1981-05-02 1982-04-29 Water-soluble dressings containing medicament

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GB2097681A true GB2097681A (en) 1982-11-10
GB2097681B GB2097681B (en) 1985-01-03

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1997016212A1 (en) * 1995-11-01 1997-05-09 Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Water soluble films
WO2006006140A1 (en) * 2004-07-08 2006-01-19 Alltracel Development Services Limited A delivery system for control bleeding skin wounds
WO2016189266A1 (en) * 2015-05-28 2016-12-01 Gama Healthcare Ltd A sterilized sachet and a method of manufacturing same

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1997016212A1 (en) * 1995-11-01 1997-05-09 Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Water soluble films
WO2006006140A1 (en) * 2004-07-08 2006-01-19 Alltracel Development Services Limited A delivery system for control bleeding skin wounds
WO2016189266A1 (en) * 2015-05-28 2016-12-01 Gama Healthcare Ltd A sterilized sachet and a method of manufacturing same
GB2555309A (en) * 2015-05-28 2018-04-25 Gama Healthcare Ltd A sterilized sachet and a method of manufacturing same
GB2555309B (en) * 2015-05-28 2020-07-22 Gama Healthcare Ltd A method of manufacturing a sterilized sachet

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