“…More recently they have been used in pharmaceutical and medical fields for isolation and purification of pharmaceutical active ingredients (Belakhov & Momot, 1983) or as functional excipients in dosage form (taste masking agent, tablet disintegrant, drug stabilization agent and sustained release agent) and or active drug ingredients. From a therapeutic standpoint it is well known that colestipol (a weakly basic ion exchange resin), cholestyramine (a strongly basic ion exchange resin) and colesevelam act as cholesterol reducers (Angelin & Einarsson, 1981), Kayexalate (sodium polystyrene sulfonate) is approved for use in the treatment of hyperkalemia (Sterns, Rojas, Bernstein, & Chennupati, 2010), sevelamer (weakly basic anion exchange resin in the chloride form) is used for the management of hyperphosphataemia in chronic renal failure (Wrong & Harland, 2007) and nicorette gum, a product based on anionic exchange resin is used in smoking cessation programs (Conaghey, Corish, & Corrigan, 1998).…”