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Ibrahim A. Darwish

Other affiliations: Yarmouk University, Farwaniya Hospital, Tulane University  ...read more
Bio: Ibrahim A. Darwish is an academic researcher from King Saud University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Detection limit & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 140 publications receiving 2161 citations. Previous affiliations of Ibrahim A. Darwish include Yarmouk University & Farwaniya Hospital.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The KinExA 3000 instrument and the Cd(II)-specific antibody were used to construct a prototype assay that could correctly assess the concentration of cadmium spiked into a groundwater sample.

177 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The basic methodologies and recent advances in immunoassay methods applied in different fields of pharmaceutical analysis have been reviewed.
Abstract: Immunoassays are bioanalytical methods in which the quantitation of the analyte depends on the reaction of an antigen (analyte) and an antibody. Immunoassays have been widely used in many important areas of pharmaceutical analysis such as diagnosis of diseases, therapeutic drug monitoring, clinical pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence studies in drug discovery and pharmaceutical industries. The importance and widespread of immunoassay methods in pharmaceutical analysis are attributed to their inherent specificity, high-throughput, and high sensitivity for the analysis of wide range of analytes in biological samples. Recently, marked improvements were achieved in the field of immunoassay development for the purposes of pharmaceutical analysis. These improvements involved the preparation of the unique immunoanalytical reagents, analysis of new categories of compounds, methodology, and instrumentation. The basic methodologies and recent advances in immunoassay methods applied in different fields of pharmaceutical analysis have been reviewed.

154 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel 96-microwell-based spectrophotometric assay has been developed and validated for determination of olmesartan medoxomil (OLM) in tablets and has great practical value in the routine analysis of OLM in quality control laboratories, as it has high throughput property, consumes minimum volume of organic solvent, and offers the reduction in the exposures of the analysts to the toxic effects of organic solvents.
Abstract: A novel 96-microwell-based spectrophotometric assay has been developed and validated for determination of olmesartan medoxomil (OLM) in tablets. The formation of a colored charge-transfer (CT) complex between OLM as a n-electron donor and 2, 5-dichloro-3, 6-dihydroxy-1, 4-benzoquinone (p-chloranilic acid, pCA) as a π-electron acceptor was investigated, for the first time, and employed as a basis in the development of the proposed assay. The proposed assay was carried out in 96-microwell plates. The absorbance of the colored-CT complex was measured at 490 nm by microwell-plate absorbance reader. The optimum conditions of the reaction and the analytical procedures of the assay were established. Under the optimum conditions, linear relationship with good correlation coefficient was found between the absorbance and the concentration of OLM in the range of 1-200 μg ml-1. The limits of detection and quantitation were 0.3 and 1 μg ml-1, respectively. No interference was observed from the additives that are present in the pharmaceutical formulation or from hydrochlorothiazide and amlodipine that are co-formulated with OLM in some formulations. The assay was successfully applied to the analysis of OLM in tablets with good accuracy and precision. The assay described herein has great practical value in the routine analysis of OLM in quality control laboratories, as it has high throughput property, consumes minimum volume of organic solvent thus it offers the reduction in the exposures of the analysts to the toxic effects of organic solvents, and reduction in the analysis cost by 50-fold. Although the proposed assay was validated for OLM, however, the same methodology could be used for any electron-donating analyte for which a CT reaction can be performed.

127 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A sensitive and simple one-step immunoassay was developed and validated for quantitative determination of Cd(II) in human serum and correlated well with those obtained by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry.
Abstract: A sensitive and simple one-step immunoassay was developed and validated for quantitative determination of Cd(II) in human serum. In this method, a monoclonal antibody that recognizes Cd(II)−EDTA complexes was directly immobilized onto microwell plates. The serum sample containing metallothionein(MT)-bound and non-MT-bound Cd(II) was acidified to displace the Cd(II) from MT. The sample was then treated with metal-free EDTA to convert Cd(II) to Cd(II)−EDTA complexes. A mixture of Cd(II)−EDTA complexes derived from serum samples and Cd(II)−EDTA conjugated with peroxidase enzyme was incubated in the wells to compete for binding sites of the immobilized antibody. After addition of peroxidase substrate, the bound fraction of the enzyme conjugate was measured by a microplate reader, and the signal was inversely proportional to the concentration of the Cd(II) in the sample. The assay limit of detection was 0.24 μg/L, and the effective working range at coefficient of variation of ≤10% was 0.24−100 μg/L. Analytical...

110 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The method was successfully applied to an analysis of the studied drugs in their pharmaceutical formulations; the recovery percentages ranged from 96.76 +/- 0.87% to 100.50 +/- 1.30%.
Abstract: Studies were carried out to develop a simple, rapid and accurate spectrophotometric method for the analysis of fifteen cephalosporins. The method depends on the charge-transfer complexation reaction between any of these drugs as an n-electron donor and p-chloranilic acid (p-CA) as a pi-acceptor to form a violet chromogen measured at 520 nm. Different variables affecting the reaction were studied and optimized. Under the optimum conditions, linear relationships with good correlation coefficients (0.9986-0.9996) were found between the absorbances and the concentrations of the studied drugs in the range of 4-1,200 microg ml(-1). The limits of assay detection ranged from 2.54 to 42.83 microg ml(-1). The accuracy and precision of the method were satisfactory. The method was successfully applied to an analysis of the studied drugs in their pharmaceutical formulations; the recovery percentages ranged from 96.76 +/- 0.87% to 100.50 +/- 1.30%. The interaction sites were confirmed by UV/VIS, IR, 1H-NMR techniques. Molecular modeling for the interaction was used for deriving an equation for calculating the epsilon value for a particular drug. This equation gave a perfect prediction for the degree of interaction of the investigated drugs with the p-CA reagent.

86 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1941-Nature
TL;DR: The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, by Prof. Louis Goodman and Prof. Alfred Gilman, New York: The Macmillan Company, 1941, p.
Abstract: The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics A Textbook of Pharmacology, Toxicology and Therapeutics for Physicians and Medical Students. By Prof. Louis Goodman and Prof. Alfred Gilman. Pp. xiii + 1383. (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1941.) 50s. net.

2,686 citations

01 May 2005

2,648 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent Trends in Macro-, Micro-, and Nanomaterial-Based Tools and Strategies for Heavy-Metal Detection Gemma Aragay, Josefina Pons, and Arben Merkoc-i.
Abstract: Recent Trends in Macro-, Micro-, and Nanomaterial-Based Tools and Strategies for Heavy-Metal Detection Gemma Aragay, Josefina Pons, and Arben Merkoc-i* Nanobioelectronics & Biosensors Group, Institut Catal a de Nanotecnologia (CIN2, ICN-CSIC), 08193, Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain Departament of Chemistry, Universitat Aut onoma de Barcelona, 08193, Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain ICREA, Barcelona, Spain

1,136 citations

01 Dec 2007

1,121 citations

Book ChapterDOI
02 Mar 2001

984 citations