Dominique Decolin
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
4 Papers
14 Citations
Dominique Decolin is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: High-performance liquid chromatography & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Hyphenated Liquid Chromatographic Method for the Determination of Colistin Residues in Bovine Tissues
TL;DR: A selective and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method has been developed for the measurement of colistin residues in milk and in four bovine tissues; selectivity is obtained in the HPLC system versus other coadministered anti-infective drugs and endogenous compounds.
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Determination of josamycin residues in porcine tissues using high-performance liquid chromatography with pre-column derivatization and spectrofluorimetric detection
TL;DR: A simple, selective and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method has been developed for the measurement of josamycin residues in four porcine tissues and full selectivity was obtained in the HPLC system versus other macrolide antibiotics, aldehydes and endogenous compounds.
15
Metabolic Profile and Quantification of Terpene Trilactones and Flavonoids in Ginkgo biloba L. Buds Depending on Physiological Stages
Dominique Laurain-Mattar,Sahar Saliba,Joseph Mattar,Afra Khiralla,Rosella Spina,Dominique Decolin +5 more
TL;DR: The phytochemical profiles of extracts from closed, semi-opened and opened leaf buds and the summer leaves of Ginkgo biloba were studied in this article , where the extraction and purification of bilobalide and ginkgolides, using andrographolide as an internal standard, were optimised.
Residue determination of two co-administered antibacterial agents--cephalexin and colistin--in calf tissues using high-performance liquid chromatography and microbiological methods.
TL;DR: Residues of two antibacterial agents, cephalexin and colistin, co-administered by intramuscular injection to calves, were quantified in four different tissues by column switching HPLC and by a microbiological method to show that no cephalxin was found at concentrations higher than the quantitation limit in the four test tissues.