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A Comparative Study of Validated Spectrophotometric and TLC-Spectrodensitometric Methods for the Determination of Sodium Cromoglicate and Fluorometholone in Ophthalmic Solution

Research Authors
Sarah S. Saleh, Hayam M. Lotfy, Nagiba Y. Hassan, Samia M. Elgizawy
Research Journal
Saudi Pharmaceutical Journal, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsps.2012.11.001
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Vol. 21
Research Year
2013
Research Member
Research Abstract

The determination of sodium cromoglicate (SCG) and fluorometholone (FLU) in ophthalmic solution was developed by simple, sensitive and precise methods. Three spectrophotometric methods were applied: absorptivity factor (a-Factor method), absorption factor (AFM) and mean centering of ratio spectra (MCR). The linearity ranges of SCG were found to be (2.5–35 µg/mL) for (a-Factor method) and (MCR); while for (AFM), it was found to be (7.5–50 µg/mL). The linearity ranges of FLU were found to be (4–16 µg/mL) for (a-Factor method) and (AFM); while for (MCR), it was found to be (2–16 µg/mL). The mean percentage recoveries/RSD for SCG were found to be 100.31/0.90, 100.23/0.57 and 100.43/1.21; while for FLU, they were found to be 100.11/0.56, 99.97/0.35 and 99.94/0.88 using (a-Factor method), (AFM) and (MCR), respectively. A TLC-spectrodensitometric method was developed by separation of SCG and FLU on silica gel 60 F254 using chloroform : methanol : toluene : triethylamine in the ratio of (5:2:4:1 v/v/v/v) as developing system, followed by spectrodensitometric measurement of the bands at 241 nm. The linearity ranges and the mean percentage recoveries/RSD were found to be (0.4–4.4 µg/band), 100.24/1.44 and (0.2–1.6 µg/band), 99.95/1.50 for SCG and FLU, respectively. A comparative study was conducted between the proposed methods to discuss the advantage of each method. The suggested methods were validated in compliance with the ICH guidelines and were successfully applied for the determination of SCG and FLU in their laboratory prepared mixtures and commercial ophthalmic solution in the presence of benzalkonium chloride as a preservative. These methods could be an alternative to different HPLC techniques in quality control laboratories lacking the required facilities for those expensive techniques.