Two simple and rapid titrimetric methods are described for the determination of cyproheptadine hydrochloride (CPH) in pharmaceuticals. The proposed methods are based on the solvent extraction-titration of CPH with two ion association reagents, sodium lauryl sulphate (SLS), (method A), and tetraphenylborate (TPB), (method B). In method A, SLS was used as titrant and the titration was carried out in the presence of dilute sulphuric acid and chloroform using dimethyl yellow as indicator, whereas, in method B, the titrant was TPB and the titration was done in Walpole buffer of pH 4.5 and 1, 2-dichloroethane using tetrabromophenolphthalein ethyl ester as indicator. The proposed procedures give sharp end points as the color of the organic phase changes from yellow to pink in method A, and from red-violet to yellow in method B. The methods are applicable over the ranges of 1.0–20.0 and 2.0–9.0 mg of CPH for method A and method B, respectively. The accuracy and precision of the methods are good. The methods were applied successfully to the determination of CPH in tablets, and the results were in agreement with the label claim and those of the reference method.
Cyproheptadine hydrochloride (CPH), chemically known as 4-(5Hdibenzo [a,d]-cyclohepten-5-ylidene)-1-methylpiperidine hydrochloride (Figure
Structure of cyproheptadine hydrochloride.
The drug is official in Indian Pharmacopeia [
Liu and Lü [
Other than official method [
Most reported methods are applicable only over the microgram and nanogram levels and the assay procedure for the determination of CPH in milligram level is of paramount importance in large scale analysis. Therefore, highly precise stoichiometric reaction with a reagent possessing antagonistic properties for the assay of pharmaceutical using titrimetric procedure is still the choice of many pharmacopoeias [
Two phase titrations (ion-pair extraction titrations or ion association titrations) employing indicators for visual end-point detection are already well established for the determination of pharmaceutical substances [
This paper presents two ion association titration methods for the determination of CPH in pharmaceuticals. The methods employ sodium lauryl sulphate (SLS) or sodium tetraphenylborate (NaTPB) as the titrant with the determinations being carried out in the presence of sulphuric acid-chloroform or Walpole buffer of pH 4.5-1, 2-dichloroethane with dimethyl yellow or tetrabromophenolphthalein ethyl ester as the indicator. The methods allow a quick determination of CPH in bulk drug and in tablets without requiring pretreatment of the sample, with high accuracy and precision, and without interference from excipients.
Elico LI 610 digital pH meter provided with a combined glass-SCE electrode system was used to record the pH and Equip-Tronics magnetic stirrer model EQ-770 was used to carry out the titration successfully.
All chemicals used were of analytical reagent grade and distilled water was used throughout. A stock standard solution containing 2.0 mg mL−1 of pharmaceutical grade cyproheptadine hydrochloride (Cipla India Ltd, Bangalore.) solution was prepared in water and used in method A, and the same was diluted to1.0 mg mL−1 with water for use in method B.
A 0.008 M sodium lauryl sulfate (Loba Chemie PVT. Ltd., Mumbai, India, assay 99%) was prepared in water and standardized using benzethonium chloride [
A 0.004 M solution of tetraphenylborate was prepared by dissolving required amount of sodium tetraphenylboron (s.d. fine-chem, Mumbai, India, assay 99.5%) in 10 mL water and diluting to 250 mL with 0.001 N sodium hydroxide solution.
0.2% (w/v) potassium salt of tetrabromophenolphthalein ethyl ester (TBPE) (Sigma-Aldrich, Inc., USA) was prepared in absolute ethanol and the Walpole buffer solution of pH 4.5 was prepared by mixing 0.2 M acetic acid solution (Merck, Mumbai, India) with 0.2 M sodium acetate solution (S. d. fine Chem Ltd., Mumbai, India) and adjusting the pH with 2 M sulphuric acid.
Chloroform and 1,2-dichloroethane (DCE) (both Merck, Mumbai, India) and absolute ethanol were used without any purification.
Different aliquots (0.5–10 mL) of standard CPH (2 mg mL−1) solution were transferred into a 100 mL beaker and the volume was adjusted to 20 mL with water. Two milliliters of 2 M H2SO4, 0.5 mL of 0.01% DMY, and 10 mL of chloroform were added and the mixture was stirred on a magnetic stirrer for 1 min. The mixture was then titrated with 0.008 M SLS with vigorous stirring until a color change from yellow to pink occurs in the organic phase at the end-point.
A blank titration was also performed and the necessary volume corrections were made. The amount of the drug in the measured aliquot was calculated from
Different aliquots of the standard solution (2.0–9.0 mL, 1 mg mL−1) of pure CPH were accurately transferred into a 100 mL beaker and the volume was adjusted to 10 mL with water. Five milliliters of the Walpole buffer of pH 4.5, 2 drops of TBPE indicator solution and 10 mL of DCE were added and mixed well by magnetic stirring. The mixture was titrated against 0.004 M TPB solution with vigorous stirring until the color of the organic phase changes from red-violet to yellow at the end point. It is not necessary to make a blank titration because the color of the organic phase is yellow in the absence of the drug. The amount of drug in the aliquot was calculated from the equation given under method A.
Thirty tablets containing CPH were weighed accurately and ground into a fine powder. An amount of powder equivalent to 100 mg of CPH was weighed into a 50 mL calibrated flask containing about 30 mL of water. The extraction was done by shaking thoroughly for about 20 min; then the volume was made up to the mark with water, mixed well and filtered using a Whatman no. 42 filter paper. The first 5 mL portion of the filtrate was discarded in order to avoid small dilution in the concentration of CPH because of the wetted filter paper. The resulting (2 mg mL−1) CPH solution was subjected to titration in method A, following the procedures described above. The solution was diluted with water to get 1 mg mL−1 CPH and used in method B.
The two-phase ion-association titration was applied to the determination of some basic pharmaceutical compounds using indicators for visible end-point detection. Earlier, the end-point detection in this type of titrations was based on the movement of the indicator from one phase to other and it was difficult to detect the end point because the color of the indicator in the aqueous phase or organic phase will be reflected in the other phase [
The use of hydrophobic indicator is an alternative approach, which remains in the organic phase throughout the titration and gives a very sharp color change [
This is based on the formation of an ion association complex between the CPH and the titrant, that is, sodium lauryl sulphate which is used as titrant with dimethyl yellow as indicator in the presence of chloroform. After treating CPH tertiary amine (R3N) with H2SO4, the resulting protonated amine (R3NH+) was titrated with sodium lauryl sulphate using DMY. The effects of the acid and the extracting solvent were optimized and it was found that 2 mL of 2 M H2SO4 in a total volume of 20 mL of aqueous phase, and chloroform as solvent (10 mL), gave a good reproducible and stoichiometric results when compared to 1,2-DCE and dichloromethane (DCM), in the range investigated.
When the mixture of CPH solution, sulphuric acid, chloroform, and the DMY indicator solution was mixed well, the aqueous phase became colorless, because the indicator itself was not soluble in water, and a yellow color was developed in the chloroform phase, because of the presence of the indicator in a molecular form. When the drug sample was titrated with SLS solution, the protonated drug (R3NH+) formed colorless ion association complex (R3NH+-Titrant−) which will be extracted into the organic phase. When the equivalence point was reached and one drop excess of the titrant was added, the color of organic phase changed from yellow to pink due to the formation of cationic form of DMY indicator, that is, DMYH+ Scheme
Effect of pH on the indicator color. (a) Dimethyl yellow, (b) tetrabromophenolphthalein ethyl ester.
The chemical reactions which form the basis for this method can be formulated as follows
Before the addition of titrant:
Before the equivalence point:
After the equivalence point:
This is based on the formation of an ion-pair complex between the CPH and TPB as titrant in a solution buffered at pH 4.5 using TBPE as indicator and 1,2-dichloroethane as extracting solvent. The complex formed in this method is highly pH dependent, so the effect of pH was studied carefully and it was found that 5 mL of Walpole buffer of pH 4.5 in a total volume of 10 mL of aqueous phase and 10 mL DCE solvent gave the best end-points and most consistent titers than chloroform or DCM.
The chemical reactions for this titration can be explained as follows.
Before adding the titrant:
Before the equivalence point:
After the equivalence point:
When the mixture of CPH solution, buffer, DCE, and TBPE indicator solution was mixed well, the aqueous phase became colorless, and a red-violet color developed in the DCE phase, because the indicator forms an organophilic ion-pair complex with the drug. When the drug sample was titrated with TPB solution, the protonated drug (R3NH+) formed colorless ion association (R3NH+ · Titrant-) which will be extracted into the organic phase. Near the equivalence point of the titration, the organic phase starts to turn green and when one drop excess of the titrant was added, the color of the organic phase changed from red-violet to yellow due to the formation of molecular form of the indicator, that is, TBPEH, Scheme
The validation of the methods was done according to the present ICH guidelines [
The proposed procedures are applicable over the ranges of 1.0–20 and 2.0–9.0 mg of CTH for method A and method B, respectively. The reaction stoichiometry was calculated to be 1 : 1 for both methods (CPH : SLS) in method A and (CPH : TPB) in method B, owing to the presence of one basic nitrogen atom in the CPH.
Accuracy of an analytical method expresses the closeness between the reference and the found values. Accuracy was evaluated as percentage relative error between the measured and taken amounts of CPH (Bias %). The results, compiled in Table
Evaluation of intraday and interday precision and accuracy.
Method | CPH taken mg | Intraday ( | Interday ( | ||||
CPH founda | Precisionb | Accuracyc | CPH founda | Precisionb | Accuracyc | ||
Method A | 6.0 | 6.04 | 1.08 | 0.65 | 6.08 | 1.68 | 0.87 |
12.0 | 12.20 | 0.96 | 1.32 | 12.24 | 1.17 | 1.48 | |
18.0 | 18.12 | 1.18 | 1.24 | 18.15 | 1.33 | 1.36 | |
Method B | 4.0 | 4.06 | 1.29 | 1.08 | 4.09 | 1.36 | 1.45 |
6.0 | 6.16 | 1.92 | 1.78 | 6.18 | 2.08 | 1.62 | |
8.0 | 8.14 | 1.75 | 1.44 | 8.16 | 1.92 | 1.75 |
aMean value of n determinations.
bRelative standard deviation (%).
cBias (%): [(found − taken)/taken] ×100.
To determine the selectivity of the methods, the analytical placebo was prepared and subjected to analysis by the proposed methods. It was confirmed that the change in the titrant value with respect to the water blank was caused only by the analyte. To identify the interference by common tablet excipients, a synthetic mixture with the composition: CPH (100 mg), talc (80 mg), starch (100 mg), calcium gluconate (60 mg), lactose (80 mg), sodium alginate (60 mg), and magnesium stearate (90 mg), was prepared and subjected to analysis by the proposed methods after solution preparation using the procedure described earlier. The percent recoveries of CPH were
The robustness of the methods was evaluated by making small incremental changes in volumes of H2SO4 (2 ± 0.5 mL) and CHCl3 (10 ± 1 mL) in method A, Walpole Buffer of pH 4.5 (5 ± 0.5 mL) and DCE (10 ± 1 mL) in method B and the effect of the changes was studied by calculating the RSD values. The changes had negligible influence on the results as revealed by small intermediate precision values expressed as % RSD. The values were lying in the range 1.35–2.85%.
Method ruggedness was expressed as the RSD of the same procedure applied by four different analysts as well as using four different burettes. The interanalysts RSD were within 2.65% whereas the interburettes RSD for the same CPH amount were ranged from1.54 to 3.35% suggesting that the developed method was rugged.
The proposed methods were successfully applied to the determination of CPH in two representative tablets Practin and Ciplactin. The results obtained are shown in Table
Comparison of assay results of proposed and reference methods.
Tablet brand name | Nominal amount, mg | Found (% of nominal amount ± SD)* | ||
Reference method | Proposed methods | |||
Method A | Method B | |||
Practina | 4 | |||
Ciplactinb | 4 | |||
*Mean value of five determinations.
**Marketed by: aWockhardt Ltd., India,bCipla India Ltd., India.
Tabulated
Results of recovery study using the standard-addition method.
Formulation studied | Method A | Method B | ||||||
CPH in tablet, mg | Pure CPH added, mg | Total found, mg | Pure CPH recovered*, percent ± SD | CPH in tablet, mg | Pure CPH added, mg | Total found, mg | Pure CPH recovered*, percent ± SD | |
Practin | 7.90 | 4.0 | 11.86 | 2.98 | 1.5 | 4.49 | ||
7.90 | 8.0 | 16.15 | 2.98 | 3.0 | 6.10 | |||
7.90 | 12.0 | 19.83 | 2.98 | 4.5 | 7.55 | |||
Ciplactin | 5.92 | 3.0 | 8.96 | 2.96 | 1.5 | 4.40 | ||
5.92 | 6.0 | 11.97 | 2.96 | 3.0 | 6.16 | |||
5.92 | 9.0 | 15.22 | 2.96 | 4.5 | 7.72 |
*Mean value of three determinations.
Two useful methods for the determination of CPH were developed, optimized, and validated based on ion-pair extraction titration. The ion-pair extraction titrimetry would be convenient for use in the laboratory, because with it, there is no need for sophisticated instrumentation. The proposed methods are simple, accurate, rapid, and cheaper than the reported chromatographic methods. The procedures do not involve any critical reaction conditions or tedious sample preparation. Among the two proposed methods, method A is more convenient as the end point detection is very clear and with a wide range (1–20 mg) than method B, which involves addition of buffer and a narrow range (2–9 mg). The wide applicability of the proposed procedures for routine quality control is well established by the assay of CPH in pure form and in pharmaceutical preparations.
The authors thank Cipla India Ltd., Bangalore, India, for gifting pure cyproheptadine hydrochloride. Authors are grateful to thank the authorities of the University of Mysore, Mysore, for permission and facilities.