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Sustained Release of a Polymeric Wetting Agent from a Silicone-Hydrogel Contact Lens Material

Abstract

Uptake and release kinetics are investigated of a dilute aqueous polymeric-surfactant wetting agent, (ethylene oxide)45-(butylene oxide)10 copolymer, also referred to as poly(oxyethylene)-co-poly(oxybutylene), impregnated into a newly designed silicone-hydrogel lens material. Transient scanning concentration profiles of the fluorescently tagged polymeric surfactant follow Fick's second law with a diffusion coefficient near 10-11 cm2/s, a value 3-4 orders smaller than that of the free surfactant in bulk water. The Nernst partition coefficient of the tagged polymeric wetting agent, determined by fluorescence microscopy and by methanol extraction, is near 350, a very large value. Back-extraction of the polymeric-surfactant wetting agent releases only ∼20% of the loaded amount after soaking the fully loaded lens for over 7 days. The remaining ∼80% is irreversibly bound in the lens matrix. Reverse-phase liquid chromatography of the lens-loaded and lens-extracted surfactant demonstrates that the released wetting agent is more hydrophilic with a higher polarity. Aqueous poly(oxyethylene)-co-poly(oxybutylene) is hypothesized to attach strongly to the lens matrix, most likely to the lens silicone domains. Strong binding leads to slow transient diffusion, to large uptake, and to significant irreversible retention. These characteristics indicate the suitability of using a poly(oxyethylene)-co-poly(oxybutylene) nonionic polymeric surfactant to maintain enhanced lens wettability over time. Methodology and findings from this study provide useful insights for designing sustained-release contact-lens wetting agents and materials.

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