scholarly journals OVERVIEW ON SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC AND CHROMATOGRAPHIC METHODS FOR ESTIMATION OF ATORVASTATIN CALCIUM AND SILDENAFIL IN BULK AND IN DIFFERENT DOSAGE FORMS

Keywords: Simultaneous estimation, combined dosage forms, Atorvastatin, Nateglinide. In the present work, the quantitative estimation of both the drugs in combined dosage forms was carried out. A new, simple, reliable, sensitive, rapid, and economical procedure for simultaneous estimation of atorvastatin calcium and nateglinide in a combined dosage form by UV spectroscopy using the simultaneous equation method was developed. Native ultraviolet absorbance maxima of the two chemotherapeutic agents were used. As both compounds do not interact chemically in methanol, the two wavelengths 246.15 nm for atorvastatin calcium and 206.6 nm for nateglinide were used. Both the drugs obeyed Beer's law in the concentration range (1-10 µg/ml) that was employed in this method. The method developed was validated to determine its linearity (r2=0.996 for atorvastatin and r2=0.997 for nateglinide), precision, reproducibility, and sensitivity. .


1984 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 648-652
Author(s):  
William Horwitz ◽  
Richard Albert

Abstract Gas chromatographic methods for the analysis of drug dosage forms consist of a simple extraction, dilution with an internal standard solution, and injection, or, even simpler, dilution with the internal standard solution and injection. These methods were used in 7 collaborative studies of the determination of 12 pharmaceuticals, published in the Journal of the AOAC during 1973–1983. A total of 43 individual materials consisting of various dosage forms were each analyzed, usually in duplicate, by an average of 8 laboratories, with a total of 582 reported determinations. The average within-laboratory coefficient of variation (CVo) was 1.25% and the average among-laboratories coefficient of variation (CVx) was 2.41%, for a CVo/CVx ratio of 0.52, at an average outlier rate of 1.4% of the reported values. The line of best fit for CVx plotted against concentration increases with decreasing concentration, extending from a CVx of approximately 1.8% at 100% concentration to a CVx of approximately 3.2% at 1% concentration. The change in CVx for a 10-fold decrease in concentration is approximately 0.7% CVx, independent of analyte and matrix.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 201-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Córdoba-Díaz ◽  
M. Córdoba-Díaz ◽  
B. Elorza

Isoniazid, one of the most important drugs for the chempublisher-idapy of tuberculosis, can react with some widely used pharmaceutical excipients, like lactose, leading to the formation of hydrazones. This interaction can dramatically modify the oral bioavailability of the drug, what could lead to a failure of the treatment. Some analytical methods, including techniques like HPLC, can be used to quantify this type of products, but all of them are tedious and time-consuming. In this sense, the aim of the present work is to develop a sensitive, rapid and cheap alternative to publisher-id published methods. For this reason, two spectrophotometric methods were developed and validated. In the first one, isoniazid and its lactosyl-hydrazone were measured together. The second one involved a reaction between not bound to lactose isoniazid and 2,3-dichloro-1,4-naphthoquinone. Lactosyl-hydrazone is quantified by comparison of the results obtained from both methods. The linearity is confirmed to be within a range of 1.5–30.0 μg/ml of total isoniazid and 0.5–30.0 μg/ml of “free” isoniazid. Limits of quantification of 1.2 μg/ml and 0.3 μg/ml were obtained for bound and free isoniazid respectively. These results indicated that the here described methods are at least, as sensitive and accurate as the vast majority of the previously published chromatographic methods. This methodology shows a good repeatability (RSD below 2.0%) as well as good accuracy (average recoveries of 100.83% and 99.96% for total and free isoniazid respectively). The results obtained from the assay of isoniazid tablets demonstrated that the proposed method constitutes a clear alternative to chromatographic methods and also to the official titration method. It would be of interest for the routine quality control of oral dosage forms containing isoniazid and lactose and for stability studies.


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