A novel capillary electrophoretic method for the separation of pancuronium (PM) and vecuronium (VM) ions utilizing capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection was devised and validated. The separation was carried out in bare fused-silica capillaries (50 μm id, 75/45 cm) at 25°C. Optimal BGE was 50 mM borate buffer of pH 9.5 containing 12.5 mg/mL of (2-hydoxypropyl)-γ-CD. The samples were injected hydrodynamically at 1000 mbar for 3 s. Separation was performed at +30 kV. Under such conditions the PM and VM were base-line resolved and the separation took < 4 min. For quantification phenyltrimethylammonium iodide was used as internal standard. Calibration curves were linear for both pancuronium bromide (PMB) and vecuronium bromide (VMB) in the range 25-250 μg/mL with r> 0.9968. The limits of detection were 7 and 6 μg/mL for PMB and VMB, respectively. The accuracy tested by recovery experiment at three concentration levels of added PMB and VMB was satisfactory (95.7-102.7%, n =3, with RSD < 2.61%). The method was successfully applied to the assay of PMB and VMB in commercial injection solutions.
A sensitive capillary electrophoretic method featuring spectrophotometric detection using a commercial Z-cell was devised for the assay of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8OHdG) in human urine. Solid-phase extraction (SPE) based on hydrophilic-lipophilic-balanced RP sorbent was utilized for urine sample pretreatment and analyte preconcentration. The separation was carried out in conventional fused-silica capillaries employing a Z-cell with hydrodynamic sample injection (at 50 mbar for 12 s). The BGE (pH* 9.2, adjusted with 1 M NaOH) contained 0.15 M boric acid and 10% v/v ACN. The detection wavelength was 282 nm. The calibration curve for 8OHdG (measured in spiked urine) was linear in the range 10-1000 ng/mL; R(2) = 0.9993. The LOD was 3 ng/mL (11 nmol/L) of 8OHdG. Determination of the 8OHdG urinary levels was possible even in healthy individuals.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.