All Stories

  1. Ocular irritation and cyclosporine A distribution in the eye tissues after administration of Solid Lipid Microparticles in the rabbit model
  2. Free silanols and ionic liquids as their suppressors in liquid chromatography
  3. New plasma preparation approach to enrich metabolome coverage in untargeted metabolomics: plasma protein bound hydrophobic metabolite release with proteinase K
  4. Ionization of tocopherols and tocotrienols in atmospheric pressure chemical ionization
  5. Targeted metabolomics in bladder cancer: From analytical methods development and validation towards application to clinical samples
  6. Urinary Nucleosides and Deoxynucleosides
  7. Stacking and Multidimensional Techniques for Capillary Electromigration Methods
  8. Sample Concentration of Charged Small Molecules and Peptides in Capillary Electrophoresis by Micelle to Cyclodextrin Stacking
  9. How to model temporal changes in non-targeted metabolomics study? A Bayesian multilevel perspective
  10. Metabolomic heterogeneity of urogenital tract cancers analyzed by complementary chromatographic techniques coupled with mass spectrometry
  11. Untargeted metabolomics provides insight into mechanisms underlying resistant hypertension
  12. Thin layer chromatography in drug discovery process
  13. TLC and molecular descriptors.
  14. Overactive bladder treatment: application of methylene blue to improve the injection technique of onabotulinum toxin A
  15. Volatile organic compounds in gastrointestinal stromal tumour tissue originating from patient-derived xenografts
  16. Migration time shift of analytes in micellar electrokinetic chromatography induced by stacking
  17. Simultaneous determination of creatinine and acetate by capillary electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detector as a feasible approach for urinary tract infection diagnosis
  18. Determination of amino acids in urine of patients with prostate cancer and benign prostate growth
  19. Evaluation of sample injection precision in respect to sensitivity in capillary electrophoresis using various injection modes
  20. Multilevel pharmacokinetics-driven modeling of metabolomics data
  21. HPLC–MS/MS method for dexmedetomidine quantification with Design of Experiments approach: application to pediatric pharmacokinetic study
  22. Sample preparation procedures utilized in microbial metabolomics: An overview
  23. Robust HPLC–MS/MS method for levofloxacin and ciprofloxacin determination in human prostate tissue
  24. Ultra-high performance liquid chromatographic determination of levofloxacin in human plasma and prostate tissue with use of experimental design optimization procedures
  25. New Biochemical Insights into the Mechanisms of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension in Humans
  26. In honor of the 70th birthday of Professor Roman Kaliszan
  27. The metabolic profiles of pterin compounds as potential biomarkers of bladder cancer—Integration of analytical-based approach with biostatistical methodology
  28. PLS-Based and Regularization-Based Methods for the Selection of Relevant Variables in Non-targeted Metabolomics Data
  29. QSRR and steroid and phenentrene derivatives in TLC.
  30. QSRR of steroid hormones in TLC.
  31. Three-step stacking by field-enhanced sample injection, sweeping, and micelle to solvent stacking in capillary electrophoresis: Anionic analytes
  32. New sorbent materials for selective extraction of cocaine and benzoylecgonine from human urine samples
  33. Different detection and stacking techniques in capillary electrophoresis for metabolomics
  34. Selective determination of cocaine and its metabolite benzoylecgonine in environmental samples by newly developed sorbent materials
  35. QSRR/QSAR of macrolide antibiotics in TLC.
  36. Sweeping of hydrophobic amines under inhomogeneous electric field and low surfactant concentration in micellar electrokinetic chromatography
  37. Three-step stacking of cationic analytes by field-enhanced sample injection, sweeping, and micelle to solvent stacking in capillary electrophoresis
  38. Roxithromycin-loaded lipid nanoparticles for follicular targeting
  39. Metabolomics in cardiovascular diseases
  40. Metabolomics for laboratory diagnostics
  41. New Materials Applied for the Stationary Phases in View of the Optimized HPLC and UHPLC Column Classification System Used in the Pharmaceutical Analysis
  42. Least absolute shrinkage and selection operator and dimensionality reduction techniques in quantitative structure retention relationship modeling of retention in hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography
  43. Urine metabolic fingerprinting using LC–MS and GC–MS reveals metabolite changes in prostate cancer: A pilot study
  44. Statistical-based approach in potential diagnostic application of urinary nucleosides in urogenital tract cancer
  45. Blood–brain barrier permeability mechanisms in view of quantitative structure–activity relationships (QSAR)
  46. A Comparative Quantitative Structure-Retention Relationships Study for Lipophilicity Determination of Compounds with a Phenanthrene Skeleton on Cyano-, Reversed Phase-, and Normal Phase-Thin Layer Chromatography Stationary Phases
  47. Analysis of urinary nucleosides as potential cancer markers determined using LC–MS technique
  48. Multidimensional capillary electrophoresis
  49. Identification of organic acids as potential biomarkers in the urine of autistic children using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
  50. The simultaneous determination of hydrophobicity and dissociation constant by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry
  51. Development and validation of UHPLC method for the determination of cyclosporine A in biological samples
  52. Using bioanalysis for cancer diagnosis and prognosis
  53. Determination of pterins in urine by HPLC with UV and fluorescent detection using different types of chromatographic stationary phases (HILIC, RP C8, RP C18)
  54. Identification of lipid fraction constituents from grasshopper (Chorthippus spp.) abdominal secretion with potential activity in wound healing with the use of GC–MS/MS technique
  55. Quantitative structure–retention relationships of ionic liquid cations in characterization of stationary phases for HPLC
  56. The Osteopontin Tissue Level as a Breast Cancer Biomarker in Females After Mastectomy Measured by the Capillary Gel Electrophoresis Technique
  57. Advanced Assessment of the Endogenous Hormone Level as a Potential Biomarker of the Urogenital Tract Cancer
  58. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry study of urinary nucleosides as potential cancer markers
  59. Steroid profiles as potential biomarkers in patients with urogenital tract cancer for diagnostic investigations analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
  60. Capillary Isoelectric Focusing
  61. New supervised alignment method as a preprocessing tool for chromatographic data in metabolomic studies
  62. Comparison of RP-HPLC columns used for determination of nucleoside metabolic patterns in urine of cancer patients
  63. Thermodynamic vs. extrathermodynamic modeling of chromatographic retention
  64. Metabolic profiling of pteridines for determination of potential biomarkers in cancer diseases
  65. Metabolomics in urogenital cancer
  66. The state-of-the-art determination of urinary nucleosides using chromatographic techniques “hyphenated” with advanced bioinformatic methods
  67. Altered levels of nucleoside metabolite profiles in urogenital tract cancer measured by capillary electrophoresis
  68. Disposition of Drugs of Abuse and Their Metabolites in Wastewater as a Method of the Estimation of Drug Consumption
  69. Metabolomic approach for determination of urinary nucleosides as potential tumor markers using electromigration techniques
  70. Chromatographic behaviour of ionic liquid cations in view of quantitative structure-retention relationship
  71. Preface
  72. Efficient recovery of electrophoretic profiles of nucleoside metabolites from urine samples by multivariate curve resolution
  73. The application of gradient reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography to the pKa and determination of polyprotic analytes
  74. Development and validation of urinary nucleosides and creatinine assay by capillary electrophoresis with solid phase extraction
  75. Evaluation of different warping methods for the analysis of CE profiles of urinary nucleosides
  76. Increasing conclusiveness of metabonomic studies by cheminformatic preprocessing of capillary electrophoretic data on urinary nucleoside profiles
  77. Separation of nicotinic acid and its structural isomers using 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium ionic liquid as a buffer additive by capillary electrophoresis
  78. Human red blood cells targeted metabolome analysis of glycolysis cycle metabolites by capillary electrophoresis using an indirect photometric detection method
  79. Combined pH/organic solvent gradient HPLC in analysis of forensic material
  80. pH/Organic Solvent Double-Gradient Reversed-Phase HPLC
  81. pH gradient high-performance liquid chromatography: theory and applications
  82. Capillary electrophoretic separation of cationic constituents of imidazolium ionic liquids
  83. High-throughput Evaluation of Lipophilicity and Acidity by New Gradient HPLC Methods
  84. Determination of pKaby pH Gradient Reversed-Phase HPLC
  85. Artificial Neural Networks for Prediction of Antibacterial Activity in Series of Imidazole Derivatives
  86. Suppression of deleterious effects of free silanols in liquid chromatography by imidazolium tetrafluoroborate ionic liquids
  87. pH Gradient Reversed-Phase HPLC
  88. New approaches to chromatographic determination of lipophilicity of xenobiotics
  89. Analysis of carboxylic acid metabolites from the tricarboxylic acid cycle in Bacillus subtilis cell extract by capillary electrophoresis using an indirect photometric detection method
  90. Determination of pyridine and adenine nucleotide metabolites in Bacillus subtilis cell extract by sweeping borate complexation capillary electrophoresis
  91. Picomolar analysis of flavins in biological samples by dynamic pH junction-sweeping capillary electrophoresis with laser-induced fluorescence detection
  92. Riboflavin binding protein—Chiral stationary phase: Investigation of retention mechanism
  93. Quantitative structure–retention relationships in affinity high-performance liquid chromatography
  94. Comparative study of surface topography of high performance liquid chromatography columns in terms of hydrophobicity
  95. Molecular mechanism of retention in reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and classification of modern stationary phases by using quantitative structure–retention relationships
  96. Application of multivariate mathematical-statistical methods to compare reversed-phase thin-layer and liquid chromatographic behaviour of tetrazolium salts in Quantitative Structure-Retention Relationships (QSRR) studies
  97. Polyfunctional chemically bonded stationary phase for reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography
  98. Separation of nitroaromatics and their transformation products in soil around ammunition plants: New high performance liquid chromatographic charge transfer stationary phases
  99. Chemically Bonded Silica Stationary Phases:  Synthesis, Physicochemical Characterization, and Molecular Mechanism of Reversed-Phase HPLC Retention
  100. Brain/blood distribution described by a combination of partition coefficient and molecular mass