Rapid and simultaneous extraction of propranolol, its neutral and basic metabolites from plasma and assay by high-performance liquid chromatography.

Article Details

Citation

Harrison PM, Tonkin AM, Cahill CM, McLean AJ

Rapid and simultaneous extraction of propranolol, its neutral and basic metabolites from plasma and assay by high-performance liquid chromatography.

J Chromatogr. 1985 Oct 11;343(2):349-58.

PubMed ID
4066876 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

A high-performance liquid chromatographic method is described for the determination of propranolol, its neutral and basic metabolites from a single plasma sample. These analytes were extracted simply and efficiently by a solid-phase extraction column based on C18 modified silica (C18 Bond-Elut). Propranolol, the 4-hydroxy and N-desisopropyl metabolites were separated on a mu Bondapak C18 column with a mobile phase of acetonitrile--0.1% phosphoric acid. Propranolol glycol was selectively eluted from the C18 Bond-Elut column with acetonitrile and chromatographed separately with a mobile phase of acetonitrile--water. The recoveries of propranolol and all metabolites were greater than 78% with an intra-assay coefficient of variation between 4.9 and 7.3% at a concentration of 5-50 ng/ml. The minimum detectable levels in 1 ml of plasma were 1.0 ng/ml propranolol, 6.0 ng/ml 4-hydroxypropranolol, 1.0 ng/ml N-desisopropylpropranolol and 2.5 ng/ml propranolol glycol. Enzyme hydrolysis, Bond-Elut extraction and high-performance liquid chromatography revealed that propranolol, the neutral and basic metabolites were extensively conjugated in dog plasma (propranolol 67%, 4-hydroxypropranolol 98%, N-desisopropylpropranolol 55% and propranolol glycol 80%). With the use of pure enzymes and a selective inhibitor the nature of this conjugation appeared to involve both glucuronidation and sulfation. The conjugation of propranolol involved mainly glucuronidation (58-62%) compared to sulfation (7-12%), whilst that of 4-hydroxypropranolol mainly involved sulfation (55-65%) compared to glucuronidation (32-38%). The values for N-desisopropylpropranolol and propranolol glycol were 26-31% and 12% sulfation, 16-29% and 68-85% glucuronidation, respectively.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drugs
Drug Reactions
Reaction
Details
Details