Stabilized analysis of antidepressant drugs by solvent-recycled liquid chromatography: procedure and proposed resolution mechanisms for chromatography.
- 1 November 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Chemistry
- Vol. 30 (11) , 1774-1779
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/30.11.1774
Abstract
In this efficient extraction and isocratic liquid-chromatographic procedure for measuring eight antidepressant drugs in serum (amoxapine, 8-hydroxyamoxapine, doxepin, desmethyldoxepin, imipramine, desipramine, amitriptyline, and nortriptyline), they are extracted from serum as a group by use of disposable solid-phase cyanopropyl columns; the eluate is injected directly onto a Zorbax cyanopropyl analytical column. This sample preparation circumvents potential problems of drug instability associated with the usual evaporating/concentrating techniques. Recycling the acetic acid/acetonitrile/n-butylamine mobile phase not only maintains a stable, cost-effective system, it also prolongs column life. Standard curves for all eight drugs are linear to 1000 micrograms/L; the detection limit is 8-10 micrograms/L. For all drugs and metabolites, within-run CVs were 0.9 to 2.2%, between-run CVs 2.1 to 3.8%. Analytical recovery of the solid-phase extraction step was 85 to 100% (mean = 94.5%) for all analytes. Standards and controls, stored frozen in drug-free serum, are stable for at least six months. We also report a study of separation mechanisms.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Liquid Chromatographic Separation of Antidepressant DrugsTherapeutic Drug Monitoring, 1983
- Simultaneous liquid chromatographic determination of antidepressant drugs in human plasmaAnalytical Chemistry, 1983
- Simultaneous liquid Chromatographie analysis of amitriptyline, nortriptyline, imipramine, desipramine, doxepin, and nordoxepinClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1981