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Enhancement of second‐migrating enantiomer peak symmetry of basic drugs by using dual‐cyclodextrin system in capillary electrophoresis
18
Citations
27
References
2000
Year
Pharmaceutical ScienceEngineeringSeparation ScienceSelective SeparationNeutral Drug SeparationsAnalytical ChemistrySeparation TechniqueAdvanced SeparationChromatographyChiral SeparationEnantiomer Peak SymmetryCapillary ElectrophoresisBiochemistryBasic DrugsAsymmetry FactorDual‐cyclodextrin SystemPharmacologyBiomolecular EngineeringMedicineDrug DiscoveryDrug Analysis
Today, chiral separations of cationic drugs by capillary electrophoresis are generally carried out by adding negatively charged cyclodextrins (CDs) to the running buffer while anionic or neutral drug separations require the use of dual-CD systems (mixtures of neutral and charged CDs). Chiral separation of some basic drugs (idazoxan, efaroxan, milnacipran) has been studied by using mixtures of sulfated-beta-CD (S-beta-CD) and hydroxypropyl-gamma-CD (HP-gamma-CD). The influence of the following parameters (nature and concentration of neutral CD, concentration of S-gamma-CD) on many separation factors (electrophoretic mobility, selectivity, efficiency, asymmetry factor, resolution) demonstrated that dual-CD systems are useful for chiral separation of basic drugs in order to improve the symmetry of the second-migrating enantiomer. Indeed, the neutral CD reduces the extent of electromigration dispersion by mobility tuning. Finally, the 0.5 mg/mL S-beta-CD/5 mg/mL HP-gamma-CD dual system has allowed the chiral separation of idazoxan, efaroxan and milnacipran enantiomers in less than 9 min.
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