A NEW COLORIMETRIC METHOD FOR THE DETERMINATION OF HYDROXYPROLINE AND ITS APPLICATION TO GELATIN HYDROLYZATES

1939 ◽  
Vol 17b (4) ◽  
pp. 139-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. McFarlane ◽  
G. H. Guest

Hydroxyproline is oxidized by sodium peroxide, if copper or cobalt is present, to give an unstable red chromogen which, in hot acid solution, can be condensed with isatin to form a stable red complex. The conditions are described which permit the direct application of this reaction to the quantitative estimation of hydroxyproline in acid or alkali hydrolyzates of gelatin. By this method moisture-free gelatin is found to contain 14.65% of hydroxyproline.

1986 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel F Youssef ◽  
Salwa R El-Shabouri ◽  
Fardous A Mohamed ◽  
Abdel Maboud I Rageh

Abstract A colorimetric method was developed for the quantitative estimation of 11 phenothiazine drugs. The method is based on the interaction of unsulfoxidized drug with morpholine and iodine-potassium iodide reagents. The interaction for all studied phenothiazine drugs yields a blue product with 2 absorption maxima: one in the range of 620-640 nm with lower molar absorptivity and the other in the range of 662-690 nm with higher molar absorptivity. The color was stable for at least 10 h. The reproducibility and recovery of the method were excellent. The method was applied successfully to the analysis of various commercially available phenothiazines in different dosage forms. The results were comparable to those obtained by official procedures. The suitability of the method for detection and estimation of promethazine excreted in urine has been suggested by preliminary experiments. Reaction products have been isolated and identified.


1974 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 796-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lewis J Frauenfelder

Abstract A chromatographic-colorimetric method has been developed for the determination of trace amounts of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and its copolymers in foods, beverages, laundry products, and cosmetics. Products containing the PVP are passed through a chromatographic column and the PVP is adsorbed at the top of the column. The column is prepared from silica gel if the sample is soluble in 40% acetic acid solution while Micro-Cel E is used when the sample is soluble in a 50% ethanol solution. The PVP adsorbed on the column is then treated with Vital Red dye and the PVP-dye complex thus formed is eluted with TV-methyl pyrrolidone and measured colorimetrically. From the data obtained it is apparent that the method can detect as little as 0.1 ppm with a reproducibility of ±5% of the amount present.


1966 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 854-856
Author(s):  
M C Dutt

Abstract The well-known reaction between methyl salicylate and ferric chloride has been successfully applied to the quantitative estimation of methyl salicylate in medicated oils. An aqueous solution of ferric chloride is added to an ether solution of medicated oil dissolved in excess water. After filtering, the absorbance of the filtrate is measured at 530 m/j, and the content of methyl salicylate is determined from a calibration curve. Methyl salicylate recoveries range from 92 to 97% for concentrations between 10 and 60% in a synthetic mixture. The method is simple and rapid, and compares favorably with Wilson’s method.


1970 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 140-146
Author(s):  
Homer B Corbin

Abstract The dithiol colorimetric method has been applied to the determination of trace amounts of tin as residues from the spray treatment of fruit with a miticide containing tricyclohexyltin hydroxide. The samples are prepared by an initial wet combustion to give a sulfuric acid solution of tin in the inorganic form. The tin is separated from other elements in the acid digest by one of two methods. One involves distillation of stannic bromide with a mixture of HBr and HCl. In the second separation method stannic iodide is extracted into n-hexane. Both separation procedures result in a solution of tin in a few milliliters of concentrated H2SO4, which is then measured spectrophotometrically. Data are presented for sensitivity and precision of the measuring system; accuracy and precision of both separation methods are illustrated by duplicate analyses and recovery tests on apples and pears treated with various cyclohexyltin compounds and inorganic tin. The extraction method has been tested for compatibility with 35 elements. Only arsenic (>0.15 mg or 1.5 ppm) and antimony (>2 mg or 20 ppm) are likely to interfere. Procedures are given for elimination of greater amounts of these elements.


1942 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Bolland ◽  
A. Sundralingam ◽  
D. A. Sutton ◽  
G. R. Tristram

Abstract In the previous publication, of Farmer, Tristram and Bolland, it was stated that methods were required to estimate the various forms in which oxygen occurs united to the rubber molecule, and a method for the estimation of hydroxyl oxygen was discussed. The determination of peroxidic oxygen in oxidized rubber presents two distinct problems. It is necessary to employ a method which, first, is satisfactory in the presence of unsaturation and, secondly, ensures effective contact between the long rubber chains and the analytical reagent. These requirements are both satisfied by the modification described below of the colorimetric method of Young, Vogt and Nieuwland. Before describing the modified technique, some mention must be made of the earlier methods and of the errors which arise when they are applied to the determination of peroxidic oxygen in unsaturated compounds. All the earlier methods for the determination of peroxidic oxygen depend on the oxidation of potassium iodide and titration of the liberated iodine. This method is open to the objection that the liberated iodine immediately attacks the double bonds remaining in the oxidized material. This difficulty was recognized by Stephens, who, using a method in which the peroxidic oxygen was reduced with stannous chloride, succeeded in estimating about 80 per cent of the total peroxide present in cyclohexene peroxide. Yule and Wilson estimated the peroxide in cracked gasoline by shaking with an acid solution of ferrous thiocyanate and back-titrating the resulting ferric salt with titanous chloride. The results were later contested by Young, Vogt and Nieuwland, who described the colorimetric method which has been adopted, with some modification, in the present work.


The urease method for the determination of urea consists essentially of two distinct operations: first, the enzymatic conversion of the urea into its equivalent of ammonium carbonate, and, secondly, the quantitative determination of the latter. Each of these operations may be accomplished in a variety of ways. In the second, for instance, no less than five different analytical procedures have hitherto been made use of. Either the alkaline ammonium carbonate has been titrated directly with acid (1); or its ammonia has been liberated by a stronger base, conducted into an excess of standard acid, and determined by titration (2); or the ammonia has been estimated colorimetrically by Nesslerization (3); or a measured amount of acid has been added to the alkaline reaction product, and the uncombined excess determined iodometrically (4); or, finally, the ammonium carbonate has been estimated by gasometric determination of its carbon dioxide component (5). One other procedure at least is theoretically possible. The transformation of a molecule of neutral urea into a molecule of ammonium carbonate involves a corresponding reduction in hydrogen ion concentration of the medium in which the change takes place. If, therefore, that medium contains an appropriate indicator, it should be possible to deduce from its change of colour the amount or concentration of the urea hydrolysed. Upon this principle we have devised a method which, although hardly a method of precision, has proved itself in certain special circumstances exceedingly useful. Our procedure is in its essential features identical with one already described by Kay (6), but achieves, through certain refinements, a much closer approach to accuracy than Kay was concerned to attain. The first step in the elaboration of the method was to ascertain what effect upon hydrogen ion concentration is produced by the ammonium carbonate derivable from known quantities of urea. Obviously this must depend upon three factors, of which the concentration of the urea itself is only the first. The others are (i) the original p H of the urea-urease mixture, and (ii) the nature and concentration of the buffer salts present. Only when these two conditions are maintained invariable will there be a fixed correspondence between initial concentration of urea and final concentration of hydrogen ions. It is further evident that if the buffer value of the medium chosen be large, the change of p H effected in a given volume by a given addition of ammonium carbonate will be relatively small; and vice versa . With any selected buffer, therefore, the sensitivity of the reaction is controlled by the concentration in which that buffer is present, and may accordingly be varied to suit the nature of the material, the quantities of urea to be dealt with, and other pertinent circumstances. For the purposes we have had in view the most suitable buffer has been a phosphate mixture of M/20 concentration and of initial p H 6·8. The effect upon this mixture of the enzymatic transformation of known quantities or concentrations of urea was determined in the following way:— 1. A series of about thirty Pyrex test-tubes, 1 x 10 cms. in size and of as nearly as possible equal internal diameter, was graduated at 5 c. c.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (o3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Imad Tarek Hanoon ◽  
Abed Mohammed Daheir AL-Joubory 2 ◽  
Marwa Mohamed Saied 3

A simple , specific, accurate and precise RP-HPLC method was developed for determination of Irbesartan (IRB) in pharmaceutical dosage forms in tablets products and sachet using symmetry (L 1 ) column at 30°C . The signal was detected at 225 nm. A mobile phase dissolve 0.5 g of buffer potassium phosphate in 100 ml distilled water and adjust pH 2.7 , methanol and acetonitrile at ratio (40 :30 :30 ) . and flow rate 1.2ml/min -1 at pH=7.2 a mobile phase The percent recovery was detected 101 % and the linearity of concentration was 10-50 µg.ml -1 and supported this method by using (FT.I.R.) spectrum method for organic spectrophotometer to prove the chemical structure of this drug and some physical properties . we are obtained the result is identical of other literature . The proposed method was applied successfully for determination of the IRB in tablets products.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liliane Larpent ◽  
Christian Verger

The fate of the peritoneal membrane on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) is usually evaluated through the modification of its permeability to various solutes as glucose, creatinine, and urea. Therefore, the accuracy of the methods used for measurements of creatinine is of great importance. A particular problem does exist for creatinine determination as it may be influenced by the presence of glucose. We studied a new enzymatic colorimetric method for creatinine determination in peritoneal dialysis solutions which contain high dextrose concentrations. Creatinine was measured in plasma, urine, and dialysate from 18 patients on CAPD and in pure dextrose solutions, with an enzymatic test (Boehringer Mannheim) and with Jaffe's reaction on two different analyzers: Astra (Beckman) and Eris (Merck). Creatinine results were similar with both assays (Jaffe's reaction and enzymatic test) when measured in blood and urine. However the Jaffe's reaction gave higher creatinine results than the enzymatic test (p < 0.001), when assays were performed in peritoneal dialysis solutions and in pure glucose solutions. In addition, it appeared that other components of dialysis solutions, mainly calcium chloride, influenced unpredictably the results of creatinine with the Jaffe's reaction. We conclude that specific enzymatic test is a more accurate and reliable method to evaluate creatinine kinetics through the peritoneal membrane when determined in CAPD solutions.


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