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One-step extraction of polar drugs from plasma by parallel artificial liquid membrane extraction

Publikace na Farmaceutická fakulta v Hradci Králové |
2017

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

The new microextraction technique named parallel artificial liquid membrane extraction (PALME) was introduced as an alternative approach to liquid-liquid extraction of charged analytes from aqueous samples. The concept is based on extraction of analytes across a supported liquid membrane sustained in the pores of a thin polymeric membrane, a well-known extraction principle also used in hollow fiber liquid phase microextraction (HF-LPME).

However, the new PALME technique offers a more user-friendly setup in which the supported liquid membrane is incorporated in a 96 well plate system. Thus, high-throughput is achievable, in addition to the green chemistry offered by using PALME.

The consumption of organic solvent is minimized to 3-5 mu L per sample. With a sample volume of 250 mu L and acceptor solution volume of 50 mu L, a maximal enrichment factor of five is achievable.

Based on these parameters, a new method for extraction of polar basic drugs was developed in the present work. The basic drugs hydralazine, ephedrine, metaraminol, salbutamol, and cimetidine were used as model analytes, and were extracted from alkalized human plasma into an aqueous solution via the supported liquid membrane.

The extraction was promoted by a carrier dissolved in the membrane, creating a temporary ion-pair complex between the hydrophilic drug and the carrier. As the modetanalytes were extracted directly into an aqueous solution, there was no need for evaporation of the extract before injection into LC-MS.

Hence, the sample preparation is performed in one step. With optimized conditions, the extraction recoveries were in the range 50-89% from human plasma after 45 min extraction.

The data from the method evaluation were satisfactory and in line with current guidelines, and revealed an extraction method with substantial potential for high throughput bio analysis of polar basic drugs.