The non-benzodiazepine-like anxiolytic agent deramiclane fumarate (EGIA-3886) was used to demonstrate that the presence of high oil/fat content in dissolution media serves as a barrier against accelerated drug degradation in acidic media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring the discovery of metabolic routes of a drug candidate, radioactively labeled substances are administered. This study reports the multidimensional application of overpressured layer chromatography (OPLC) and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with online or off-line nondestructive radioactivity detection methods in metabolism studies. Among these methods, digital autoradiography and flow-cell radioactivity detectors (RD) using solid scintillators are used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood intake is known to exert numerous effects on drug pharmacokinetics through a variety of mechanisms, and for some medicinal compounds, food-drug interaction could prove of crucial clinical importance. As for acid-labile drugs, bioavailability studies performed in both fasting and fed states are considered essential. A simple and fast in vitro procedure using the USP Dissolution Apparatus II (paddle method) was applied to study acid buffering capacity of food components under simulated in vivo environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to investigate the sorption behavior and mechanisms of the organic pesticides on soil. To establish the sorption isotherms of six commonly used pesticides (acetochlor, atrazine, diazinon, carbendazim, imidacloprid, and isoproturon), laboratory equilibrium studies were performed at extended concentration ranges on brown forest soil using the batch equilibrium technique. The pesticide concentrations in the equilibrated liquid phase were quantified with high-performance liquid chromatograph by ultraviolet detection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaboratory studies were conducted to determine the sorption behaviour of six commonly used pesticides (acetochlor, atrazine, carbendazim, diazinon, imidacloprid and isoproturon) on Hungarian brown forest soil with clay alluviation (Luvisol) using the batch equilibrium technique. The sorption isotherms could be described by the Freundlich equation in non-linear form (n < 1) for all compounds, however in case of diazinon using the extended Freundlich equation proved to be a better approach. The adsorption constant related soil organic carbon content (Koc) calculated from Freundlich equation were 314 for acetochlor, 133 for atrazine, 2805 for carbendazim, 1589 for diazinon, 210 for imidacloprid and 174 for isoproturon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF