Abstract

A set of new aluminium complexes of norfloxacin (NOR) and ciprofloxacin (CIP) that show an improvement in their pharmaceutical properties were studied using solution and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and infrared (IR) spectroscopy. The complexes synthesized with two different methods were compared. One of these methods will allow formulation of the compounds at production scale. High-resolution (13)C spectra were obtained with the cross-polarization and magic angle spinning (CP-MAS) experiment. These spectra were assigned by comparing them with the solution data of the pure drug and by using a quaternary carbon edition technique. The carbon relaxation times in the rotating frame, T(1rhoC), were measured for all the complexes. A two-exponential decay evidences that the complexes are nonhomogeneous. The short T(1rhoC) values are in the range 320-1100 micros and the long values in the range 1.8-7 ms. (27)Al MAS NMR spectra revealed an octahedral coordination between the aluminium ion and oxygens of the pure drug, supporting a 3:1 ligand:metal stoichiometry in both CIP and NOR complexes. The stretching and deformation modes of carboxylic acid and carboxylate and keto groups were analyzed by IR. This technique shows that the same modes are present in the aluminium complexes obtained by the two methods and that the coordination of the fluoroquinolone to aluminium occurs through the 4-keto and 3-carboxylic groups.

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