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Chemist advice needed on Climbazole in Capric/Caprylic Triglyceride
Hi,
As background to this question: I have a diagnosis of seborreheic dermatitis, which comes and goes. An effective treatments are antifungals with one of the most being climbazole. There are many products out there for this condition but I am senstive/reactive/allergic to many ingredients and particularly preservatives. I am not allergic to capric/caprylic triglycerides, however, which can be used to dissolve climbazole in. It is the only thing I have found that works and does not irritate my skin.
My question is for those with more chemistry knowledge than me. Some people who do this (there are others I am in contact with) have noticed that after a week or so the climbazole can precipitate but not always. We have been trying to work out why. I hypothesised that this was due to temperature as once mine precipitated when I took it with me somewhere and it was cold. I made a batch and put some in the fridge and some on the side at room temperature. The opposite happened. A few weeks later the stuff in the fridge is fine and the stuff at room temperature isn’t. Both were in a sterile plastic container. It is the plastic container that has gone cloudy but not all the way - only from the top to near the bottom (leaving a clear gap). This has happened before and I just thought it was an anomaly but clearly it isn’t. You can see a picture here https://drive.google.com/file/d/1m4jorC20oK7GfM6iYe7lG43UxdDaIBZPmw/view?usp=sharing you cannot see precipitation in the oil itself, only the plastic is cloudy.
Any suggestions or ideas about what is going on?
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