Abstract

Azithromycin monohydrate is an antibiotic, which belongs to the category of macrolide antibiotics. It is used for an effective antibiotic for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, upper and lower respiratory tract infections and skin structure infections. A gas chromatographic–mass spectrometric (GC–MS) method is described for the determination of azithromycin monohydrate residue in biological fluids. This method allows detection of residual azithromycin (AZM) in biological fluids by using single-ion monitoring (SIM). The confirmation by a full-scan electron impact (EI) mass spectrum is possible if residual level in a sample is >5 μg/mL. AZM is extracted with chloroform from a sample and cleaned up by n-hexane washing followed by partition between chloroform and phosphate buffer solution. The cleaned up extract is acetylated in acetic anhydride–pyridine mixture (1:2) at room temperature. The reaction mixture is injected into the GC–MS apparatus, and the detection has been conducted using SIM at m/z 200. The detection limit is 2 μg/mL. This proposed method could be successfully applied to the drug analysis in the forensic laboratories as well as in the toxicological laboratories.

Highlights

  • Azithromycin monohydrate is an antibiotic, which belongs to the category of macrolide antibiotics

  • AZM is an effective antibiotic for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, upper and lower respiratory tract infections and skin structure infections (Kirst and Sides 1989)

  • This paper describes a gas chromatographic–mass spectrometric (GC–MS) method for the determination of AZM residue in biological fluids

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Azithromycin monohydrate is an antibiotic, which belongs to the category of macrolide antibiotics It is used for an effective antibiotic for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, upper and lower respiratory tract infections and skin structure infections. Antibiotics are used extensively in food-producing animals to maintain optimal health and to promote growth The use of these drugs can leave drug residues in edible tissues. AZM exhibits a more extensive spectrum of activity, AZM is an effective antibiotic for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, upper and lower respiratory tract infections and skin structure infections (Kirst and Sides 1989). It is used primarily to treat various bacterial infections caused by respiratory pathogens, such as aerobic Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria It prevents bacterial cells from manufacturing specific proteins necessary for their survival. Peak plasma concentrations are achieved (Debremaeker et al 2003) within 2 to 3 h

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call