Validation of Liquid Chromatographic Method for Assay of Chlorthalidone in Tablet Formulations

1985 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-98
Author(s):  
Jerry Fogel ◽  
Jay Sisco ◽  
Fritz Hess

Abstract A stability-indicating, reverse phase liquid chromatographic (LC) method was developed for assay of chlorthalidone in tablet formulations. The chromatographic system separates the parent compound from its potential hydrolysis product (4'-chIoro-3'-sulfamoyl-2-benzophenone carboxylic acid), which can be quantitated at low levels, and another degradation product (2-chloro-5-(l-methoxy-3-oxo-l-isoindolinyl)benzenesulfonamide), which was found during the experimental work. The procedure can also be used for content uniformity determinations. The general utility of the method was demonstrated by the assay of several product brands. The validated procedure was shown to be accurate, precise, reproducible, and specific.

1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth M Weaver ◽  
Michael E Neale ◽  
Ann Laneville

Abstract A method was developed for the detection and quantitation of piperine in Piper nigrum. A reverse-phase liquid chromatographic system equipped with a C18 column with detection at 340 nm was used. A rapid 1 h acetone extraction followed by solvent dilution was used to avoid sample cleanup. The detection limit is 3 ng injected piperine, with 97.5-100.5% recovery of added piperine.


Author(s):  
R. Anantha Kumar ◽  
G. Raveendr Babu ◽  
Sowjanya M. ◽  
Ramayyappa M.

The aim of this work is to build up a fast, exact, precise and touchy reverse phase liquid chromatographic method for the synchronous assessment of amiloride and hydrochlorothiazide in tablet dose structure. The chromatographic strategy was normalized utilizing Hypersil ODS segment (250×4.6mm, 5μm molecule size) with UV discovery at 210nm and stream pace of 1ml/min. The portable stage includes phosphate buffer (pH acclimated to 2.5 with dilute Ortho Phosphoric acid) and acetonitrile in the proportion of 60:40 v/v. The linearity of proposed technique was examined in the scope of 5-30μg/ml (R²=0.999) for amiloride and 50-300μg/ml (R²=0.999) for Hydrochlorothiazide appropriately. The limit of detection (LOD) was discovered to be 0.10μg/ml and 0.40μg/ml for Amiloride and Hydrochlorothiazide appropriately. The limit of quantitation (LOQ) was discovered to be 0.30μg/ml and 1.20μg/ml for Amiloride and Hydrochlorothiazide separately. The retention times of Amiloride and Hydrochlorothiazide were found to be 3.258min and 2.383min separately. The technique was truly recommended and %RSD was found to be under 2 demonstrating serious level of exactness and accuracy. Subsequently proposed strategy can be effectively evaluated for the synchronous assessment of Amiloride and Hydrochlorothiazide in promoted formulations.


1989 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mercedes Jalón ◽  
Majesús Peńa ◽  
Julián C Rivas

Abstract A reverse-phase liquid chromatographic method is described for the determination of carminic acid in yogurt. A C18 column is used with acetonitrile-1.19M formic acid (19 + 81) as mobile phase and diode array detection. Sample preparation includes deproteinization with papain and purification in a polyamide column. The relative standard deviation for repeated determinations of carminic acid in a commercial strawberry-flavored yogurt was 3.0%. Recoveries of carminic acid added to a natural-flavored yogurt ranged from 87.2 to 95.3% with a mean of 90.2%. The method permits measurement of amounts as low as 0.10 mg/kg.


1983 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 663-666
Author(s):  
Ijaz Ahmad

Abstract A simple and fast analytical method is described for the quantitative determination of low levels of paraquat residues in water. The method involves extraction and concentration of paraquat in water by using a C18 Sep-Pak cartridge followed by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatographic determination with ultraviolet detection at 257 nm. Recoveries of paraquat from spiked samples were above 93% with a coefficient of variation of 6.1%. The method can be used for water samples with paraquat concentrations as low as 0.05 ppm.


1987 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 1008-1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshihiro Nagayama ◽  
Toshio Maki ◽  
Kimiko Kan ◽  
Mami Iida ◽  
Taichiro Nishima

Abstract A simple, rapid, highly sensitive liquid chromatographic method is described for the quantitative determination of paraquat and diquat residues in agricultural products. Paraquat and diquat are extracted with hot dilute hydrochloric acid and are cleaned up on an Amberlite CG-50 column, followed by reverse-phase liquid chromatography on an NH, column, with ultraviolet detection at 257 nm (paraquat) and 310 nm (diquat). The minimum detectable concentration of both paraquat and diquat was 0.5 ng per injection, which corresponds to a lower detection limit of approximately 0.02 fjg/g in the original samples. Recoveries of paraquat and diquat added to various samples were greater than 79%, and averaged 91 and 90%, respectively, at the 0.1 and 1.0 μg/g spiking levels.


1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (6) ◽  
pp. 1156-1157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence Felice ◽  
El Hassane Abdennebi ◽  
Muhammed Ashraf

Abstract A liquid chromatographic method is described for the measurement of thiamphenicol in bovine plasma. The plasma (1 mL) is extracted with ethyl acetate. After the solvent is evaporated under a stream of nitrogen, the residue is reconstituted in methanol-water and analyzed by reverse-phase liquid chromatography with UV detection at 224 nm. The intra-day recoveries for bovine plasma spiked with 5 and 50 μg/mL of thiamphenicol were 102 and 101%, respectively, with coefficients of variation of 2.40 and 0.28%, respectively. The interday recoveries for the 5 and 50 μg/mL samples were 103 and 101%, respectively, with coefficients of variation of 3.40 and 0.94%, respectively. The sensitivity of the method allows quantitation to at least the 100 ng/mL level


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