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JMB » Fri Nov 01, 2013 4:18 pm
See below (available on-line, free) for exptl. details of derivatization with 2,4-DNFB of an amino-bisphosphonate (alendronate)
N.B. this is not an HPLC method !!
Chemistry Central Journal
April 2012, 6:25,
Open Access
Validated spectrophotometric methods for determination of Alendronate sodium in tablets through nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions
Mohamed I Walash,
Mohamed E-S Metwally,
Manal Eid,
Rania N El-Shaheny
» Download PDF (306 KB) » View Article
As already stated, your gentamicin is very likely to be a mixture and you will need to resolve the components by HPLC. Doing a lit. search for indirect UV-detection ion chromatographic method for alendronate (without derivn.) reveals several procedures. However, ion-chromatography may not resolve the isomers adequately.
Depending on time/cost constraints, you may want to pursue the derivatization procedure initially to assess the chromatographic complexity of your analyte. If your analyte is "clean", then an indirect-UV IC method may be acceptable.
Please let us know what does/does not work.