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1.
2.
A rapid, selective and accurate high-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry assay for the quantification of sanfetrinem in human plasma has been developed and validated. The performance of manual and automated sample preparation was assessed; 50 μl of plasma sample was deproteinized with acetonitrile, followed by dilution with water and injection onto the LC system. Chromatographic separation was achieved on a Phenomenex Luna C18(2), 50×2.0 (5 μm) column with a mobile phase consisting of water–acetonitrile with 0.1% formic acid followed by detection with a Perkin-Elmer API3000 mass spectrometer in multiple reaction monitoring mode. The lower limit of quantification was improved by five times compared to the UV method previously reported. A range of concentration from 10 ng/ml to 5 μg/ml was covered. The method was applied to the quantification of sanfetrinem in human plasma samples from healthy volunteers participating in a clinical study.  相似文献   

3.
This study describes a HPLC method to determine the concentrations of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) and salicylic acid (SA) in human stratum corneum and in plasma. The stratum corneum layers for ASA/SA analysis were removed from three patients with postherpetic hyperalgesia treated with topical and oral aspirin. Blood samples were also collected from the same patients. Tape strippings were placed in acetonitrile and sonicated for 15 min. After centrifuging, aliquots of the supernatant were injected into the chromatograph. ASA and SA from plasma samples were extracted on Isolute C8 columns. Due to interfering peaks in the tape samples, HPLC conditions were slightly different for tape and plasma samples. ASA and SA were separated on a LiChrospher 100 RP-18 column at 1 ml/min using a water–phosphate buffer (pH 2.5)–acetonitrile mobile phase (35:40:25, v/v/v). A linear response to quantities of ASA from 0.1 to 100 μg/cm2 and of SA from 0.1 to 5 μg/cm2 in tape and to quantities of ASA 0.1 to 2 μg/ml and 1 to 50 μg/ml was obtained and the recovery from tape and plasma samples was over 98%. The method is sensitive (0.1 μg/cm2) and specific enough to allow the determination of the drugs in the skin not only after topical but also after oral administration. A good sensitivity was also obtained in plasma (0.1 μg/ml) allowing study of the kinetics of ASA and SA in plasma after oral administration. Concentrations of ASA after topical administration were 100–200 times higher than after oral administration. Plasma levels of ASA and SA after oral administration were similar to those previously found. No ASA or SA were detected in plasma after topical ASA administration.  相似文献   

4.
A rapid and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography–electrospray MS method has been developed to determine tissue distribution of betulinic acid in mice. The method involved deproteinization of these samples with 2.5 volumes (v/w) of acetonitrile–ethanol (1:1) and then 5 μl aliquots of the supernatant were injected onto a C18 reversed-phase column coupled with an electrospray MS system. The mobile phase employed isocratic elution with 80% acetonitrile for 10 min; the flow-rate was 0.7 ml/min. The column effluent was analyzed by selected ion monitoring for the negative pseudo-molecular ion of betulinic acid [M−H] at m/z 455. The limit of detection for betulinic acid in biological samples by this method was approximately 1.4 pg and the coefficients of variation of the assay (intra- and inter-day) were generally low (below 9.1%). When athymic mice bearing human melanoma were treated with betulinic acid (500 mg/kg, i.p.), distribution was as follows: tumor, 452.2±261.2 μg/g; liver, 233.9±80.3 μg/g; lung, 74.8±63.7 μg/g; kidney, 95.8±122.8 μg/g; blood, 1.8±0.5 μg/ml. No interference was noted due to endogenous substances. These methods of analysis should be of value in future studies related to the development and characterization of betulinic acid.  相似文献   

5.
A reliable high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been validated for determination of gallamine in rat plasma, muscle tissue and microdialysate samples. A C18 reversed-phase column with mobile phase of methanol and water containing 12.5 mM tetrabutyl ammonium (TBA) hydrogen sulphate (22:78, v/v) was used. The flow-rate was 1 ml/min with UV detection at 229 nm. Sample preparation involved protein precipitation with acetonitrile for plasma and muscle tissue homogenate samples. Microdialysate samples were injected into the HPLC system without any sample preparation. Intra-day and inter-day accuracy and precision of the assay were <13%. The limit of quantification was 1 μg/ml for plasma, 1.6 μg/g for muscle tissue and 0.5 μg/ml for microdialysate samples. The assay was applied successfully to analysis of samples obtained from a pharmacokinetic study in rats using the microdialysis technique.  相似文献   

6.
A simple and rapid method is described for the GC–MS determination of 4-nonylphenols (NOs) and 4-tert-octylphenol (OC) in biological samples. The NOs and OC in the sample are extracted with acetonitrile and the lipid in the sample extract is eliminated by partitioning between hexane and acetonitrile. After Florisil PR column clean-up, the sample extract is analyzed by GC–MS in the selected ion monitoring (SIM) mode. Average recoveries in pale chub (fish) and corbicula (shellfish) are 86.0 and 93.4% for NOs, and 95.8 and 96.4% for OC, respectively, spiked at the levels of 1.0 μg of NOs and 0.1 μg of OC per 5 g of fish and shellfish samples. The detection limits are 20 ng/g for NOs and 2 ng/g for OC.  相似文献   

7.
High-performance liquid chromatographic methods using reversed-phase chromatography and electrochemical detection have been developed for the quantitation of azithromycin in serum and tissues of laboratory animals and humans. Serum sample preparation involved addition of internal standard, alkalinization, and solvent extraction. Tissue sample preparation involved Polytron homogenization in acetonitrile containing internal standard, evaporation of the supernatant, alkalinization of the residue, and solvent extraction. Serum samples were chromatographed on an alkylphenyl-bonded silica column eluted with pH 6.8–7.2 mobile phase with a dual-electrode coulometric detector operated in the oxidative screen mode. Serum and tissue samples were chromatographed on a γRP-1 alumina column with pH 11 mobile phase with a glassy carbon amperometric detector. Recovery of azithromycin was 87% from serum and 85% from tissues. Linear standard curves were prepared in serum over two concentration ranges (0.01–0.20 and 0.20–2.0 μg/ml) and in tissues over several concentration ranges (0.1–2, 1–10, 10–100, and 100–1000 μg/g). In serum and tissues, intra- and inter-assay precision ranged from 1 to 8% and 4 to 11%, respectively. The tissue assay has been applied to liver, kidney, lung, spleen, muscle, fat, brain, tonsil, lymph nodes, eye, prostate and other urological tissues, and gynecological tissues.  相似文献   

8.
A system of an automatic sample preparation procedure followed by on-line injection of the sample extract into a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer (GC–MS) was developed for the simultaneous analysis of seven barbiturates in human serum. A sample clean-up was performed by a solid-phase extraction (SPE) on a C18 disposable cartridge. A SPE cartridge was preconditioned with methanol and 0.1 M phosphate buffer. After loading 1.5 ml of a diluted serum sample into the SPE cartridge, the cartridge was washed with 2.5 ml of methanol–water (1:9, v/v). Barbiturates were eluted with 1.0 ml of chloroform–isopropanol (3:1, v/v) from the cartridge. The eluate (1 μl) was injected into the GC–MS. The calibration curves, using an internal standard method, demonstrated a good linearity throughout the concentration range from 0.1 to 10 μg ml−1 for all barbiturates extracted. The proposed method was applied to 27 clinical serum samples from three patients who were administrated secobarbital.  相似文献   

9.
The use of marker compounds for estimating drug metabolic capacity or pharmacokinetic parameters is common in the biological sciences. Often small laboratory animals are used and thus sample size is a limiting concern. In this report, we describe an assay we developed for measuring the concentration of acetaminophen and its conjugated metabolites in low-volume serum samples. Acetaminophen and metabolites were removed from 10 μl serum samples by a single-step 6% (v/v) perchloric acid deproteination using theophylline as internal standard. Samples were separated in a pH 2.2 sodium sulfate–acetonitrile mobile phase at a flow-rate of 1.5 ml/min on a 15 cm octadecylsilyl column at room temperature. Analytes were detected at a wavelength of 254 nm. The resulting chromatograms showed no interfering peaks from endogenous serum components. The concentration ranges measured were 1.56–200 μg/ml for acetaminophen and acetaminophen sulfate and 3.91–500 μg/ml for acetaminophen glucuronide. The assay was linear in the range of concentrations analyzed. The intra-day and inter-day coefficient of variation ranged from 0.4 to 8.2% and 0.2 to 12.3% for acetaminophen, 0.5 to 12.9% and 0.3 to 16.1% for acetaminophen glucuronide, and 0.4 to 8.1% and 0.2 to 14.3% for acetaminophen sulfate, respectively. Results from the experiments show that acetaminophen and its conjugated metabolites can easily and reproducibly be measured in low-volume serum samples and thus may offer an additional method to measure these compounds when the volume of biological samples may be limited.  相似文献   

10.
A high-performance liquid chromatographic method has been developed for the simultaneous determination of mycophenolic acid (MPA) and its glucuronide conjugate (MPAG) in human plasma. The method involves protein precipitation with acetonitrile, followed by ion-pair reversed-phase chromatography on C18 column, with a 40 mM tetrabutyl ammonium bromide (TBA)–acetonitrile (65:35, v/v) mobile phase. A 20-μl volume of clear supernatant was injected after centrifugation, and the eluent was monitored at 304 nm. No interference was found either with endogenous substances or with many concurrently used drugs, indicating a good selectivity for the procedure. Calibration curves were linear over a concentration range of 0.5–20.0 μg/ml for MPA and 5–200 μg/ml for MPAG. The accuracy of the method is good, that is, the relative error is below 5%. The intra- and inter-day reproducibility of the analytical method is adequate with relative statistical deviations of 6% or below. The limits of quantification for MPA and MPAG were lower than 0.5 and 5.0 μg/ml, respectively, using 50 μl of plasma. The method was used to determine the pharmacokinetic parameters of MPA and MPAG following oral administration in a patient with renal transplantation.  相似文献   

11.
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic method for the determination of the enantiomers of atenolol in rat hepatic microsome has been developed. Racemic atenolol was extracted from alkalinized rat hepatic microsome by ethyl acetate. The organic layer was dried with anhydrous sodium sulfate and evaporated using a gentle stream of air. Atenolol racemic compound was derivatized with 2,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-β- -glycopyranosyl isothiocyanate at 35°C for 30 min to form diastereomers. After removal of excess solvent, the diastereomers were dissolved in phosphate buffer (pH 4.6)–acetonitrile (50:30). The diastereomers were separated on a Shimadzu CLC-C18 column (10 μm particle size, 10 cm×0.46 cm I.D.) with a mobile phase of phosphate buffer–methanol–acetonitrile (50:20:30, v/v) at a flow-rate of 0.5 ml/min. A UV–VIS detector was operated at 254 nm. For each enantiomer, the limit of detection was 0.055 μg/ml (signal-to-noise ratio 3) and the limit of quantification (signal-to-noise ratio 10) was 0.145 μg/ml (RSD <10%). In the range 0.145–20 μg/ml, intra-day coefficients of variation were 1.0–7.0% and inter-day coefficients of variation were 0.4–16.5% for each enantiomer. The assay was applied to determine the concentrations of atenolol enantiomers in rat hepatic microsome as a function of time after incubation of racemic atenolol.  相似文献   

12.
A selective HPLC method is described for the determination of cefpodoxime levels in plasma and sinus mucosa. Sample preparation included solid-phase extraction with a C8 cartridge. Cefpodoxime and cefaclor (internal standard) were eluted with methanol and analyzed on an optimised system consisting of a C18 stationary phase and a ternary mobile phase (0.05 M acetate buffer pH 3.8—methanol—acetonitrile, 87:10:3, v/v) monitored at 235 nm. Linearity and both between- and within-day reproducibility were assessed for plasma and sinus mucosa samples. Inter-assay coefficients of variation were lower than 13.6% (n = 10) for plasma (0.2 μg/ml) and lower than 12.4% (n = 5) for sinus mucosa (0.25 μg/g). The quantification limit was 0.05 μg/ml for plasma and 0.13 μg/g for tissue. The method was used to study the diffusion of cefpodoxime in sinus mucosa.  相似文献   

13.
A sensitive and very specific method, using liquid chromatography–electrospray mass spectrometry (LC–ES-MS), was developed for the determination of epirubicin, doxorubicin, daunorubicin, idarubicin and the respective active metabolites of the last three, namely doxorubicinol, daunorubicinol and idarubicinol in human serum, using aclarubicin as internal standard. Once thawed, 0.5-ml serum samples underwent an automated solid-phase extraction, using C18 Bond Elut cartridges (Varian) and a Zymark Rapid-Trace robot. After elution of the compounds with chloroform–2-propanol (4:1, v/v) and evaporation, the residue was reconstituted with a mixture of 5 mM ammonium formate buffer (pH 4.5)–acetonitrile (60:40, v/v). The chromatographic separation was performed using a Symmetry C18, 3.5 μm (150×1 mm I.D.) reversed-phase column, and a mixture of 5 mM ammonium formate buffer (pH 3)–acetonitrile (70:30, v/v) as mobile phase, delivered at 50 μl/min. The compounds were detected in the selected ion monitoring mode using, as quantitation ions, m/z 291 for idarubicin and idarubicinol, m/z 321 for daunorubicin and daunorubicinol, m/z 361 for epirubicin and doxorubicin, m/z 363 for doxorubicinol and m/z 812 for aclarubicin (I.S.). Extraction recovery was between 71 and 105% depending on compounds and concentration. The limit of detection was 0.5 ng/ml for daunorubicin and idarubicinol, 1 ng/ml for doxorubicin, epirubicin and idarubicin, 2 ng/ml for daunorubicinol and 2.5 ng/ml for doxorubicinol. The limit of quantitation (LOQ) was 2.5 ng/ml for doxorubicin, epirubicin and daunorubicinol, and 5 ng/ml for daunorubicin, idarubicin, doxorubicinol and idarubicinol. Linearity was verified from these LOQs up to 2000 ng/ml for the parent drugs (r≥0.992) and 200 ng/ml for the active metabolites (r≥0.985). Above LOQ, the within-day and between-day precision relative standard deviation values were all less than 15%. This assay was applied successfully to the analysis of human serum samples collected in patients administered doxorubicin or daunorubicin intravenously. This method is rapid, reliable, allows an easy sample preparation owing to the automated extraction and a high selectivity owing to MS detection.  相似文献   

14.
A rapid and sensitive method for the assay of zonisamide in serum was developed using a solid-phase extraction technique followed by high-performance liquid chromatography. A 20-μl volume of human serum was first purified with a Bond-Elut cartridge column. Then, the methanol eluate was injected onto a reversed-phase HPLC column with a UV detector. The mobile phase was acetonitrile—methanol—distilled water (17:20:63, v/v) and the detection wavelength was 246 nm. The detection limit was 0.1 μg/ml in serum. The coefficients of variation were 4.2–5.6% and 5.1–9.1% for the within-day and between-day assays, respectively. This method can be used for clinical pharmacokinetic studies of zonisamide in serum even in infant patients with epilepsy.  相似文献   

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16.
This work presents the development and the validation of an LC–MS–MS method with atmospheric pressure chemical ionization for the quantitative determination of levamisole, an anthelmintic for veterinary use, in porcine tissue samples. A liquid–liquid back extraction procedure using hexane–isoamylalcohol (95:5, v/v) as extraction solvent was followed by a solid-phase extraction procedure using an SCX column to clean up the tissue samples. Methyllevamisole was used as the internal standard. Chromatographic separation was achieved on a LiChrospher® 60 RP-select B (5 μm) column using a mixture of 0.1 M ammonium acetate in water and acetonitrile as the mobile phase. The mass spectrometer was operated in MS–MS full scanning mode. The method was validated for the analysis of various porcine tissues: muscle, kidney, liver, fat and skin plus fat, according to the requirements defined by the European Community. Calibration graphs were prepared for all tissues and good linearity was achieved over the concentration ranges tested (r>0.99 and goodness of fit <10%). Limits of quantification of 5.0 ng/g were obtained for the analysis of levamisole in muscle, kidney, fat and skin plus fat tissues, and of 50.0 ng/g for liver analysis, which correspond in all cases to half the MRLs (maximum residue limits). Limits of detection ranged between 2 and 4 ng/g tissue. The within-day and between-day precisions (RSD, %) and the results for accuracy fell within the ranges specified. The method has been successfully used for the quantitative determination of levamisole in tissue samples from pigs medicated via drinking water. Moreover the product ion spectra of the levamisole peak in spiked and incurred tissue samples were in close agreement (based on ion ratio measurements) with those of standard solutions, indicating the worthiness of the described method for pure qualitative purposes.  相似文献   

17.
A selective semi-automated solid-phase extraction (SPE) of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs diclofenac sodium, indomethacin and phenylbutazone from urine prior to high-performance liquid chromatography was investigated. The drugs were recovered from urine buffered at pH 5.0 using C18 Bond-Elut cartridges as solid sorbent material and mixtures of methanol–aqueous buffer or acetonitrile–aqueous buffer as washing and elution solvents. The extracts were chromatographed on a reversed-phase ODS column using 10 mM acetate buffer (pH 4.0)–acetonitrile (58:42, v/v) as the mobile phase, and the effluent from the column was monitored at 210 nm with ultraviolet detection. Absolute recoveries of the anti-inflammatory drugs within the range 0.02–1.0 μg/ml were about 85% for diclofenac and indomethacin, and 50% for phenylbutazone without any interference from endogenous compounds of the urine. The within-day and between-day repeatabilities were in all cases less than 5% and 10%, respectively. Limits of detection were 0.007 μg/ml for diclofenac sodium and indomethacin and 0.035 μg/ml for phenylbutazone, whereas limits of quantitation were 0.02 μg/ml for diclofenac and indomethacin and 0.1 μg/ml for phenylbutazone.  相似文献   

18.
A rapid and sensitive liquid chromatography–electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (HPLC–ESI-MS) assay has been developed for the measurement of moclobemide and metabolites, Ro12-5637 and Ro12-8095, in human plasma. Sample preparation (0.5 ml plasma) involves solid-phase extraction using C18 cartridges. A Nova-Pak phenyl column (Waters, 4 μm, 150×2 mm I.D.) was employed for analyte separation with a mixture of 0.2 M ammonium formate buffer, pH 3.57 and acetonitrile as the mobile phase. The within- and between-day precisions of the assay were <18% and the limit of quantification for all analytes was 0.01 μg/ml. The total run-time was 6 min. The method described was used to measure moclobemide, Ro12-5637 and Ro12-8095 in human plasma following an oral 300 mg dose.  相似文献   

19.
Indomethacin and mefenamic acid are widely used clinically as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents. Both drugs have also been found effective to produce closure of patent ductus arteriosus in premature neonates. A simple, rapid, sensitive and reliable HPLC method is described for the determination of indomethacin and mefenamic acid in human plasma. As these drugs are not applied together, the compounds are alternately used as analyte and internal standard. Plasma was deproteinized with acetonitrile, the supernatant fraction was evaporated to dryness and the resulting residue was reconstituted in the mobile phase and injected into the HPLC system. The chromatographic separation was performed on a C18 column (250 × 4.6 mm I.D.) using 10 mM phosphoric acid—acetonitrile (40:60, v/v) as the mobile phase and both drugs were detected at 280 nm. The calibration graphs were linear with a correlation coefficient (r) of 0.999 or better from 0.1 to 10 μg/ml and the detection limits were 0.06 μg/ml for indomethacin and 0.08 μg/ml for mefenamic acid, for 50μl plasma samples. The method was not interfered with by other plasma components and has been found particularly useful for paediatric use. The within-day precision and accuracy of the method were evaluated for three concentrations in spiked plasma samples. The coefficients of variation were less than 5% and the accuracy was nearly 100% for both drugs.  相似文献   

20.
A high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analytical method for the determination of oxolinic acid and flumequine in Artemia nauplii is described. The samples were extracted and cleaned up by a solid-phase extraction (SPE) procedure using SPE C18 cartridges. Oxolinic acid and flumequine were determined by reversed-phase HPLC using a mobile phase of methanol–0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 3 (45:55, v/v) and a UV detection wavelength of 254 nm. Calibration curves were linear for oxolinic acid in the range of 0.2–50 μg/g (r2=0.9998) and for flumequine in the range of 0.3–50 μg/g (r2=0.9994). Mean recoveries amounted to 100.8% and 98.4% for oxolinic acid and flumequine, respectively. The quantification limit was 0.2 μg/g for oxolinic acid and 0.3 μg/g for flumequine. Quantitative data from an in vivo feeding study indicated excellent uptake of both drugs by Artemia nauplii.  相似文献   

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