Cephalexin: A Channel Hydrate
โ Scribed by Alan R. Kennedy; Maurice O. Okoth; David B. Sheen; John N. Sherwood; Simon J. Teat; Ranko M. Vrcelj
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Weight
- 76 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0931-7597
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Cephalexin was found to be polarographically reducible after hydrolysis in an acidic medium, producing two polarographic waves. Both waves were diffusion controlled. The concentration-diffusion plot method was used for the analysis of cephalexin in capsules.
The pharmacokinetics of cephalexin and cefadroxil were compared following single 500 mg oral doses to 12 healthy male volunteers. Doses were administered after an overnight fast according to a crossover design. Plasma and urinary levels of both compounds were determined by HPLC procedures. Cephalexi
## Abstract For Abstract see ChemInform Abstract in Full Text.
Nitrofurantoin can form two monohydrates, which have the same chemical composition and molar ratio of water, but differ in the crystal arrangements. The two monohydrates (hydrates I and II) could be produced independently via evaporative crystallization, where supersaturation and solvent composition