Abstract

The effects of tetraalkylammonium salts and sodium dodecyl sulphate on the migration behaviour of human urinary components and other negatively charged or neutral solutes were investigated. The sulphate acted mainly on hydrophobic and positively charged substances, whereas the ammonium salts acted mainly on negatively charged solutes. By choosing the components of the eluent carefully, the free and conjugate forms of 3-methylflavone-8-carboxylic acid (MFA) in human urine, the major metabolites of flavoxate, could be simultaneously determined without pretreatment, using fenprofen as an internal standard. The calibration curve of MFA was linear in the range 1–50 μg/ml and the detection limit was 0.2 μg/ml, which covered the urine levels encountered in pharmacokinetic studies. The intra-day and inter-day precisions of the method, expressed as the relative standard deviation, were less than 2 and 3%, respectively. This method was successfully applied to an excretion study of MFA in eight healthy volunteers, and the results were in agreement with data in the literature obtained by gas chromatography.

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