Abstract

Even though many pharmaceuticals show native fluorescence, there is also an important group of compounds which is not fluorescent. A main object of studies is to make them fluorescent, principally by using fluorescent probes through derivatisation reactions. An account of the fluorescent probes more widely used for the determination of drugs and related compounds is presented in this review paper. A wide variety of fluorescent probes is described on the basis of their ability to react specifically with various functional groups. Attention is focused on derivatisation reactions used in spectrofluorimetry and chromatographic techniques (HPLC, TLC) with fluorimetric detection. The review covers only those fluorescent probes whose use involves a chemical reaction with the analyte, and not those methods that involve physico-chemical interactions such as sensitised or charge transfer processes. Many of these derivatisation reactions have been widely used in the detection of primary and secondary amines. Reagents such as dansyl chloride, fluorescamine, o-phtalaldehyde are very well known. Other reagents have also been developed for other functional groups, for example dansyl hydrazine for compounds with a carbonyl function or 4-bromomethyl-7-methoxy-coumarin for acidic compounds . Acid chlorides such as dansyl chloride may also react with different functional groups carrying active hydrogens as do phenols. The use and development of new fluorescent probes in pharmaceutical analysis is a subject for further studies.

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