Protein Information

ID 131
Name C18
Synonyms B1; D1; BBS 9; BBS9; BBS9 GENE; Bardet Biedl syndrome 9 protein; C18; PTH responsive osteosarcoma B1 protein…

Compound Information

ID 1409
Name silica gel
CAS silica gel

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
20355184 Taha EA, Salama NN, Wang S: Enantioseparation of cetirizine by chromatographic methods and discrimination by (1) H-NMR. Drug Test Anal. 2009 Mar;1(3):118-24.
Cetirizine is an antihistaminic drug used to prevent and treat allergic conditions. It is currently marketed as a racemate. The H1-antagonist activity of cetirizine is primarily due to (R)-levocetirizine. This has led to the introduction of (R)-levocetirizine into clinical practice, and the chiral switching is expected to be more selective and safer. The present work represents three methods for the analysis and chiral discrimination of cetirizine. The first method was based on the enantioseparation of cetirizine on silica gel TLC plates using different chiral selectors as mobile phase additives. The mobile phase enabling successful resolution was acetonitrile-water 17: 3, (v/v) containing 1 mM of chiral selector, namely hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin, chondroitin sulphate or vancomycin hydrochloride. The second method was a validated high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), based on stereoselective separation of cetirizine and quantitative determination of its eutomer (R)-levocetirizine on a monolithic C18 column using hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin as a chiral mobile phase additive. The resolved peaks of (R)-levocetirizine and (S)-dextrocetirizine were confirmed by further mass spectrometry. The third method used a (1) H-NMR technique to characterize cetirizine and (R)-levocetirizine. These methods are selective and accurate, and can be easily applied for chiral discrimination and determination of cetirizine in drug substance and drug product in quality control laboratory. Moreover, chiral purity testing of (R)-levocetirizine can also be monitored by the chromatographic methods. Copyright (c) 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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