Objectives: Concentrated pills, as a modernization and upgrade of traditional pills, have achieved significant advancements in dosage form. However, their extended disintegration and dispersion times have become a major limitation to their therapeutic efficacy. Therefore, an in-depth study and explanation of the dissolution mechanism of concentrated pills, along with the development of processing technology to control dissolution time, has emerged as a critical bottleneck in improving the quality of concentrated pills. Methods: In this study, the Liuwei Dihuang (LWDH) concentrated pill, derived from the classical Liuwei Dihuang pill, was selected as a representative model. Two drying methods—hot-air drying and hot air–microwave combined drying—were comparatively investigated to evaluate their effects on dissolution time. The dissolution behavior was elucidated by analyzing water migration during the dissolution process, as well as the textural properties and internal structural characteristics of the pills using Low-Field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (LF-NMR), Micro-Computed Tomography (Micro-CT), texture analysis, and other modern techniques. Results: The results indicated that: (i) The rate of water absorption during the dissolution process of the LWDH pill was influenced by the number and size of the internal pores. (ii) Hot air–microwave combined drying results in more pores and faster dissolution. (iii) High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) fingerprints showed no significant differences in the active ingredients between the samples. Conclusions: The drying method significantly affected the internal structure of the pills, suggesting that controlling the drying process could address the prolonged dissolution time of concentrated pills.
Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.