Regenesis2
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2011
- Messages
- 210
If a drug is neither fat or water soluble, how does your body process and excrete it? I've read about drugs that have solubility only in odd substances like chloroform, methanol, etc.
N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
No Sir, you are right: Treating hydroxyzine (sufficiently long) with HCl will result in the hydrochloride salt. The pamoate is intentionally used because of the mentioned low solubility, due to which it releases the active drug comparatively slow. Hence, it acts as kinda sustained release form of the drug.I think if you wash some vistaril with HCl you'll get hydroxizine hydrochloride. I could be wrong.
In pharmacology, the salt form of pamoic acid (pamoate ion) can be used as a counter ion of a drug compound to increase the solubility of the drug in water. The presence of multiple oxygen atoms enables significant hydrogen bonding to occur. Hydrogen bonds facilitate the dissolution of compounds in water.