2,456 research outputs found

    Gabapentin Bioequivalence Study: Quantification By Liquid Chromatography Coupled To Mass Spectrometry

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    The study was performed to compare the bioavailability of two gabapentin 400 mg capsule formulation (Gabapentin from Arrow Farmacêutica S/A as test formulation and Neurontin ® from Pfizer, Brazil, as reference formulation) in 26 volunteers of both sexes. The study was conducted open with randomized two period crossover design and a one week wash out period. Plasma samples were obtained over a 48 hour interval. The gabapentin was analyzed by LC/MS/MS, in the presence of pracetamole as internal standard. With plasma concentration vs. time curves, data obtained from this metabolite, the following pharmacokinetics parameters were obtained: AUC 0-t, AUC 0-inf and C max. Geometric mean of gabapentin/Neurontin ® 400 mg individual percent ratio was 100.58% AUC 0-t, 101.35% for AUC 0-inf and 97.76% for C max. The 90% confidence intervals were 92.00 - 109.95%, 93.00 - 110.44%, 88.41 - 108.10%, respectively. Since the 90% confidence intervals for C max, AUC 0-t and AUC 0 -inf were within the 80 - 125% interval proposed by Food and Drug Administration, it was concluded that gabapentin 400 mg capsule was bioequivalent to Neurontin ® 400 mg capsule according to both the rate and extent of absorption. © 2011 Junior EA, et al.38187190Wattananat, T., Akarawut, W., Validated LC-MS-MS Method for the Determination of Gabapentin in Human Plasma: Application to a Bioequivalence Study (2009) J Chromatogr Sci, 47, pp. 868-871Stewart, B.H., Kagler, A.R., Thompson, P.R., Bockbrader, H.N., A saturable transport mechanism in the intestinal absorption of gabapentin is the underlying cause of the lack of proportionality between increasing dose and drug levels in plasma (1993) Pharma Res, 10, pp. 276-281McLean, M.J., Gabapentin in the management of convulsive disorders (1999) Epilepsia, 40, pp. 39-50Goa, K.L., Sorkin, E.M., Gabapentin: A review of its pharmacological properties and clinical potential in epilepsy (1993) Drugs, 46, pp. 409-427Zhu, Z., Neirinck, L., High-performance liquid chromatographic method for the determination of gabapentin in human plasma (2002) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 779, pp. 307-312Sagirli, O., Cetin, S.M., Determination of gabapentin in human plasma and urine by high-performance liquid chromatography with UV-vis detection (2006) J Pharm Biomed Anal, 42, pp. 618-624Jalalizadeh, H., Souri, E., Tehrani, M.B., Jahangiri, A., Validated HPLC method for the determination of gabapentin in human plasma using precolumn derivatization with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and its application to a pharmacokinetic study (2007) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 854, pp. 43-47Forrest, G., Sills, G.J., Leach, J.P., Brodie, M.J., Determination of gabapentin in plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography (1996) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 681, pp. 421-425Tang, P.H., Miles, M.V., Glauser, T.A., Degrauw, T., Automated microanalysis of gabapentin in human serum by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorometric detection (1999) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 727, pp. 125-129Hassan, E.M., Belal, F., Al-Deeb, O.A., Khalil, N.Y., Spectrofluorimetric determination of vigabatrin and gabapentin in dosage forms and spiked plasma samples through derivatization with 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (2001) J. AOAC Int., 84, pp. 1017-1024Gauthier, D., Gupta, R., Determination of gabapentin in plasma by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection after solid-phase extraction with a C18 column (2002) Clin Chem, 48, pp. 2259-2261Chung, T.C., Tai, C.T., Wu, H.L., Simple and sensitive liquid chromatographic method with fluorimetric detection for the analysis of gabapentin in human plasma (2006) J Chromatogr A, 119, pp. 294-298Bahrami, G., Kiani, A., Sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic quantitation of gabapentin in human serum using liquid-liquid extraction and pre-column derivatization with 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (2006) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 835, pp. 123-126Krivanek, P., Koppatz, K., Turnheim, K., Simultaneous isocratic HPLC determination of vigabatrin and gabapentin in human plasma by dansyl derivatization (2003) Ther Drug Monit, 25, pp. 374-377Chang, S.Y., Wang, F.Y., Simple and sensitive liquid chromatographic method with fluorimetric detection for the analysis of gabapentin in human plasma (2004) J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci, 799, pp. 265-270Wolf, C.E., Saady, J.J., Poklis, A., Determination of gabapentin in serum using solid phase extraction and gas-liquid chromatography (1996) J Anal Toxicol, 20, pp. 498-501Kushnir, M.M., Cossett, J., Brown, P.I., Urry, F.M., Analysis of gabapentin in serum and plasma by solid-phase extraction and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry for therapeutic drug monitoring (1999) J Anal Toxicol, 23, pp. 1-6Borrey, D.C., Godderis, K.O., Engelrelst, V.I., Bernard, D.R., Langlois, M.R., Quantitative determination of vigabatrin and gabapentin in human serum by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (2005) Clin Chim Acta, 354, pp. 147-151Gambelunghe, C., Mariucci, G., Tantucci, M., Ambrosini, M.V., Gas chromatography-tandemmass spectrometry analysis of gabapentin in serum (2005) Biomed Chromatogr, 19, pp. 63-67Matar, K.M., Abdel-Hamid, M.E., Rapid tandem mass spectrometric method for determination of gabapentin in human plasma (2005) Chromatographia, 61, pp. 499-504Ramakrishna, N.V.S., Vishwottam, K.N., Koteshwara, M., Maroj, S., Santosh, M., Rapid quantification of gabapentin in human plasma by liquid chromatography/tandemmass spectrometry (2006) J Pharm Biomed Anal, 40, pp. 360-368Ifa, D.R., Falci, M., Moraes, M.E., Bezerra, F.A., Moraes, M.O., Gabapentin quantification in human plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. Application to bioequivalence study (2001) J Mass Spectrom, 36, pp. 188-194Ji, H.Y., Jeong, D.W., Kim, Y.H., Kim, H.H., Yoon, Y.S., Determination of gabapentin in human plasma using hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (2006) Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom, 20, pp. 2127-2132Carlsson, K.C., Reubsaet, J.L., Sample preparation and determination of gabapentin in venous and capillary blood using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (2004) J Pharm Biomed Anal, 34, pp. 415-423Park, J.H., Jhee, O.H., Park, S.H., Lee, J.S., Lee, M.H., Validated LC-MS/ MS method for quantification of gabapentin in human plasma: Application to pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence studies in Korean volunteers (2007) Biomed Chromatogr, 21, pp. 829-83

    Gravitational Collapse: Expanding and Collapsing Regions

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    We investigate the expanding and collapsing regions by taking two well-known spherically symmetric spacetimes. For this purpose, the general formalism is developed by using Israel junction conditions for arbitrary spacetimes. This has been used to obtain the surface energy density and the tangential pressure. The minimal pressure provides the gateway to explore the expanding and collapsing regions. We take Minkowski and Kantowski-Sachs spacetimes and use the general formulation to investigate the expanding and collapsing regions of the shell.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Gen. Relativ. Gra

    Teleparallel Equivalent of Non-Abelian Kaluza-Klein Theory

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    Based on the equivalence between a gauge theory for the translation group and general relativity, a teleparallel version of the non-abelian Kaluza-Klein theory is constructed. In this theory, only the fiber-space turns out to be higher-dimensional, spacetime being kept always four-dimensional. The resulting model is a gauge theory that unifies, in the Kaluza-Klein sense, gravitational and gauge fields. In contrast to the ordinary Kaluza-Klein models, this theory defines a natural length-scale for the compact sub-manifold of the fiber space, which is shown to be of the order of the Planck length.Comment: Revtex4, 7 pages, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Mean field effects in a trapped classical gas

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    In this article, we investigate mean field effects for a bosonic gas harmonically trapped above the transition temperature in the collisionless regime. We point out that those effects can play also a role in low dimensional system. Our treatment relies on the Boltzmann equation with the inclusion of the mean field term. The equilibrium state is first discussed. The dispersion relation for collective oscillations (monopole, quadrupole, dipole modes) is then derived. In particular, our treatment gives the frequency of the monopole mode in an isotropic and harmonic trap in the presence of mean field in all dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, no figure submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Characterization of IHF Binding to DNA Four-Way Junctions and Forks

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    The objective of the study is to characterise the mechanical properties of Ti-15Zr binary alloy dental implants and to describe their biomechanical behaviour as well as their osseointegration capacity compared with the conventional Ti-6Al-4V (TAV) alloy implants. The mechanical properties of Ti-15Zr binary alloy were characterised using Roxoli

    Matrix theory of gravitation

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    A new classical theory of gravitation within the framework of general relativity is presented. It is based on a matrix formulation of four-dimensional Riemann-spaces and uses no artificial fields or adjustable parameters. The geometrical stress-energy tensor is derived from a matrix-trace Lagrangian, which is not equivalent to the curvature scalar R. To enable a direct comparison with the Einstein-theory a tetrad formalism is utilized, which shows similarities to teleparallel gravitation theories, but uses complex tetrads. Matrix theory might solve a 27-year-old, fundamental problem of those theories (sec. 4.1). For the standard test cases (PPN scheme, Schwarzschild-solution) no differences to the Einstein-theory are found. However, the matrix theory exhibits novel, interesting vacuum solutions.Comment: 24 page

    Non-destructive, dynamic detectors for Bose-Einstein condensates

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    We propose and analyze a series of non-destructive, dynamic detectors for Bose-Einstein condensates based on photo-detectors operating at the shot noise limit. These detectors are compatible with real time feedback to the condensate. The signal to noise ratio of different detection schemes are compared subject to the constraint of minimal heating due to photon absorption and spontaneous emission. This constraint leads to different optimal operating points for interference-based schemes. We find the somewhat counter-intuitive result that without the presence of a cavity, interferometry causes as much destruction as absorption for optically thin clouds. For optically thick clouds, cavity-free interferometry is superior to absorption, but it still cannot be made arbitrarily non-destructive . We propose a cavity-based measurement of atomic density which can in principle be made arbitrarily non-destructive for a given signal to noise ratio
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