The effects of polyacrylic acid gel on the nasal absorption of insulin and [Asu1,7]-eel calcitonin were investigated in rats. The nasal administration of insulin (1 IU kg-1) in polyacrylic acid gel at 0.1 and 1% w/v showed maximum hypoglycaemic effects at 30 min and 1 h after administration, respectively. However, the nasal administration of insulin in carboxymethyl cellulose (1% w/v) solution had no hypoglycaemic effect at the same dose. When [Asu1,7]-eel calcitonin (10 U kg-1) was administered nasally in polyacrylic acid gel (0.1% w/v), a prominent hypocalcaemic effect was observed during the first 30 min. Nasal administration of [Asu1,7]-eel calcitonin in saline had no hypocalcaemic effect at the same dose. The results indicate that the polyacrylic acid gel base significantly enhanced the absorption of insulin and [Asu1,7]-eel calcitonin via the nasal cavity.
Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) was extracted from monkey periodontium, consisting of gingiva, periodontal ligament, alveolar bone and cementum, and from dental pulp and dentin by digestion with Pronase E. Unsaturated disaccharide isomers formed by chondroitinase AC digestion from chondroitin sulfate were labeled with dansylhydrazine and analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. These tissues showed different molar ratios of the unsaturated chondroitin sulfate disaccharides. The ratio of delta Di-4S to delta Di-6S was lowest in the dental pulp, followed by the gingiva, periodontal ligament, dentin, alveolar bone, and cementum, in that order. It was greater in the calcified than in the uncalcified tissues.
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