Abstract

BackgroundEtodolac (ETD) is a non-steroidal anti-inflamatory antirheumatic drug. A survey of the literature reveals that there is no method available for the determination of ETD in pure form and pharmaceutical formulations by oxidation-reduction reactions.ResultsWe describe three simple, sensitive and reproducible spectrophotometric assays (A-C) for the determination of etodolac in pure form and in pharmaceutical formulations. Methods A and B are based on the oxidation of etodolac by Fe3+ in the presence of o-phenanthroline (o-phen) or bipyridyl (bipy). The formation of the tris-complex on reaction with Fe3+-o-phen and/or Fe3+-bipy mixtures in acetate buffer solution at optimum pH was demonstrated at 510 and 520 nm with o-phen and bipy. Method C is based on the oxidation of etodolac by Fe3+ in acidic medium, and the subsequent interaction of iron(II) with ferricyanide to form Prussian blue, with the product exhibiting an absorption maximum at 726 nm. The concentration ranges are 0.5–8, 1.0–10 and 2–18 μg mL-1 respectively for methods A, B and C. For more accurate analysis, Ringbom optimum concentration ranges were calculated, in addition to molar absorptivity, Sandell sensitivity, detection and quantification limits.ConclusionOur methods were successfully applied to the determination of etodolac in bulk and pharmaceutical formulations without any interference from common excipients. The relative standard deviations were ≤ 0.76 %, with recoveries of 99.87 % – 100.21 %.

Highlights

  • Etodolac (ETD) is a non-steroidal anti-inflamatory antirheumatic drug

  • This study describes spectrophotometric methods that can be used in laboratories where modern and expensive equipment, such as that required for GC or HPLC, is not available

  • A and B are based on the formation of tris(o-phenanthroline)-iron(II) or tris(2,2'-bipyridyl)-iron(II) following the reaction of ETD with Fe3+-o-phen or Fe3+-bipy respectively

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Summary

Introduction

A survey of the literature reveals that there is no method available for the determination of ETD in pure form and pharmaceutical formulations by oxidation-reduction reactions. A survey of the literature reveals that there are very few reported methods for the determination of ETD in biological fluids, pharmaceutical formulations and in presence of its enantiomer Of those studies reported, the techniques used include chromatography, HPLC [2,3,4,5], GC [6,7,8], in addition to spectrofluorimetric [9] and spectrophotometric methods [9,10,11]. An extensive survey of the literature revealed that there is no method available for the simultaneous determination of ETD in pure form and pharmaceutical formulations by oxidation-reduction reactions. This study describes spectrophotometric methods that can be used in laboratories where modern and expensive equipment, such as that required for GC or HPLC, is not available

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