|  Webinar Registration Metabolite Quantitation in the Age of MIST Event Overview: The importance of metabolites in assessing drug safety is becoming a more critical element of the drug development process. One challenge is assessing the relative amounts of metabolites when standards are unavailable, especially when relative response can vary over several orders of magnitude. This, as well as other challenges, requires new analytical approaches. Presented is an assessment of UHPLC and charged aerosol detection coupled with UV and MS for semi-quantitative estimation of metabolites. The use of an inverse compensate gradient to ensure semi-quantitative response, in combination with universal detection strategies is also explored. Event Date: Wednesday, September 22, 2010 at 11:00 am EDT, 15:00 GMT Click here to register for this event. Webinar Archive siRNA Delivery Systems – Analysis of Materials for Nonbiological Approaches The original event was broadcast Wednesday, June 16, 2010 Duration: 75-minutes Click here to view this event archive Brain, Liver and Thiols – The Common Thread The original event was broadcast May 27, 2010 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view this event archive PAT and Pharmaceutical Manufacturing: Overcoming the Trials and Tribulations The original event was broadcast April 14, 2010 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view this event archive Contemporary Techniques in Drug Development The original event was broadcast February 17, 2010 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view this event archive Making Complex HPLC Analysis Simple- for a Wide Spectrum of Analytes: Ions, Surfactants, Polymers, Biofuel The original event was broadcast December 10, 2009 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view this event archive Electrochemistry–Mass Spectrometry as a Tool for Drug Metabolism The original event was broadcast December 9, 2009 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view this event archive Looking into the Lipidome: New Approaches to Analyzing Lipids The original event was broadcast November 5, 2008 Duration: 60-minutes Click here to view the event archive |