<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><Articles><Article><id>942</id><JournalTitle>DEVELOPMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION OF THEOPHYLLINE SUSTAINED-RELEASE MATRIX TABLETS USING NATURAL POLYMERS</JournalTitle><Abstract>Theophylline is a narrow-therapeutic-index bronchodilator whose short half-life necessitates frequent dosing,
making it a strong candidate for sustained-release (SR) delivery. This study aimed to develop and characterise theophylline
SR matrix tablets using natural, biodegradable polymers - guar gum, xanthan gum and hibiscus mucilage - as economical
alternatives to synthetic release retardants. Methods: Six matrix formulations (F1-F6) were prepared by direct compression
with increasing polymer loads. Preformulation (solubility, FTIR compatibility), powder micromeritics, post-compression
quality attributes and in-vitro dissolution (USP apparatus II, 12 h) were evaluated, and release data were fitted to zeroorder, first-order, Higuchi and Korsmeyer-Peppas models. Results: The drug was freely soluble in phosphate buffer (1.05
mg/mL) and FTIR showed no drug-excipient incompatibility. Blends flowed acceptably (angle of repose 27.5-29.1 deg;
Carr's index 21-23%). All tablets met pharmacopoeial limits for weight variation, hardness (4.6-5.4 kg), friability (<1%)
and drug content (98.8-101.2%). Cumulative release at 12 h ranged from 72% (F1) to 98% (F6); retardation increased with
polymer concentration. Release followed Higuchi diffusion with anomalous (non-Fickian) transport by the KorsmeyerPeppas model. Conclusion: Natural polymers effectively sustained theophylline release over 12 h, offering a cost-effective,
biocompatible matrix platform; the higher-polymer formulations provided the most controlled release</Abstract><Email>vedpurushoth@gmail.com</Email><articletype>Research</articletype><volume>17</volume><issue>3</issue><year>2026</year><keyword>Theophylline; sustained release; matrix tablet; natural polymers; guar gum; xanthan gum; release kinetics.</keyword><AUTHORS>Purushothaman M,Revathi M, Murali P, Abhiram K, Anji G</AUTHORS><afflication>Professor, Department of Pharmaceutics, KLR Pharmacy College, Palwancha, Telangana 507115, India,KLR Pharmacy College, Palwancha, Telangana 507115, India.</afflication></Article></Articles>