ISSN: 2155-9872

Revista de técnicas analíticas y bioanalíticas

Acceso abierto

Nuestro grupo organiza más de 3000 Series de conferencias Eventos cada año en EE. UU., Europa y América. Asia con el apoyo de 1.000 sociedades científicas más y publica más de 700 Acceso abierto Revistas que contienen más de 50.000 personalidades eminentes, científicos de renombre como miembros del consejo editorial.

Revistas de acceso abierto que ganan más lectores y citas
700 revistas y 15 000 000 de lectores Cada revista obtiene más de 25 000 lectores

Indexado en
  • Índice de fuentes CAS (CASSI)
  • Índice Copérnico
  • Google Académico
  • sherpa romeo
  • Base de datos de revistas académicas
  • Abrir puerta J
  • Revista GenámicaBuscar
  • TOC de revistas
  • InvestigaciónBiblia
  • Infraestructura Nacional del Conocimiento de China (CNKI)
  • Directorio de publicaciones periódicas de Ulrich
  • Biblioteca de revistas electrónicas
  • Búsqueda de referencia
  • Directorio de indexación de revistas de investigación (DRJI)
  • Universidad Hamdard
  • EBSCO AZ
  • OCLC-WorldCat
  • director académico
  • Catálogo en línea SWB
  • Biblioteca Virtual de Biología (vifabio)
  • publones
  • Pub Europeo
  • ICMJE
Comparte esta página

Abstracto

Efficacy of Medications in Space Determined By Raman Spectroscopy: Aspirin Degradation

Stuart Farquharson, Zack Gladding, Carl Brouillette, Wayne Smith, Amelia Farquharson, Chetan Shende

Medication is the primary defense against the deleterious effects that astronauts experience in space due to weightlessness, such bone loss and headaches. Recent studies of medications returned to earth from the International Space Station suggest that high radiation levels of solar particle events (SPE) and galactic cosmic rays (GCR) can degrade medications, and potentially render them inadequate during a long mission, such as a roundtrip journey to Mars. In an effort to predict medication shelf-lives, proton irradiation at ground-based laboratories has been used to simulate SPE and GRC conditions, as quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography. Unfortunately,such predictions do not take into account extreme SPEs and/or CGRs that can occur during such long duration missions.We believe that medications, the active pharmaceutical ingredient, as well as the potentially toxic degradants, can be tested on-board space crafts at the time of use by a compact Raman spectrometer. Here we present the forced degradation of an aspirin tablet by acid hydrolysis, representing the high energy protons that make up ~85% of the SPEs and CGRs.Raman analyses of this tablet, and 10 expired twelve-year-old aspirin tablets and their toxic degradant, salicylic acid,are presented.