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Review

Liquid Chromatographic Analysis of Antiepileptic Drugs: An Overview

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Pages 3711-3740 | Received 08 Aug 1990, Accepted 21 Aug 1990, Published online: 23 Oct 2006
 

Abstract

Extraction of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) can be carried out by different procedures which include: (i) protein precipitation, (ii) liquid-liquid and (iii) liquid-solid extraction. The latter yields a cleaner sample and shows efficiency comparable to the other procedures; recovery ranges from 90 to 105% for most AEDs.

Types of column include: (i) conventional, (ii) microbore and (iii) high-speed. Compared with conventional and high-speed columns, microbore columns, which have a diameter of 1–2 mm, allow to achieve the highest sensibility (up to double values) and to reduce solvent consume (up to 70 %). High-speed columns, characterized by a length of 3–10 cm and by a reduced packing particle size (⊘ 3μm), make the analysis time more rapid by at least 50%.

Reversed phase chromatography is the most versatile technique as compared to the normal phase and to the precision and accuracy. These parameters, in fact, resulted close to those of the fluorescence polarization immunoassay technique (FPIA), which was the most precise and accurate among the methods compared (79).

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