Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS
Our CCBS database includes more than 11,000 abstracts of publications. Perform your own detailed search of TLC/HPTLC literature and find relevant information.
The Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS contains all abstracts of CBS issues beginning with CBS 51. The database is updated after the publication of every other CBS edition. Currently the Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service includes more than 11'000 abstracts of publications between 1983 and today. With the online version you can perform your own detailed TLC/HPTLC literature search:
- Full text search: Enter a keyword, e.g. an author's name, a substance, a technique, a reagent or a term and see all related publications
- Browse and search by CBS classification: Select one of the 38 CBS classification categories where you want to search by a keyword
- Keyword register: select an initial character and browse associated keywords
- Search by CBS edition: Select a CBS edition and find all related publications
Registered users can create a tailor made PDF of selected articles throughout CCBS search – simply use the cart icon on the right hand of each abstract to create your individual selection of abstracts. You can export your saved items to PDF by clicking the download icon.
Phytochem. Anal. 19, 2-16 (2008). Recent developments in the phytochemical analysis of Panax ginseng are described, including different approaches such as the determination of the total saponin content and target compound and group-specific analysis using HPTLC-MS. In metabolite profiling, the paper describes the use of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and high-resolution mass spectrometry.
CBS Publishers & Distributors, New Delhi, India, (1996), 459 pages, ISBN 81-239-0439-8.1. The book consists of an introductory section of 74 pages about general TLC techniques with 30 figures and 54 literature references; the practical part with 197 protocols of the analysis of pharmaceutical formulations give analytical parameters such as sample and standard preparation, chromatographic conditions, densitometric parameters, etc. See detailed review on page 51 CBS 76.
Encyclopedia of Chromatography Third Edition 1, 1749-1756 (2009). This review describes the current materials and techniques most widely used for the analysis of pesticides by TLC. In detail, information regarding sample preparation, stationary and mobile phases, detection and quantification is included. Specific examples of pesticides analysis in water and soil are also described.
J. Planar Chromatogr. 28, 413-425 (2015). Review of the use of thin-layer chromatography for the analysis of ionizable substances. Regarding acidic and basic compounds, the review describes the use of polar adsorbents and polar bonded stationary phases as well as reversed-phase separations._x000D_
J. Liq. Chromatogr. Relat. Technol. 28, 2297-2314 (2005). Review of the use of TLC and HPTLC for the analysis of biological samples of particular interest to biologists, biochemists, hematologists, immunologists, medical diagnosticians, and molecular biologists. Determinations of amino acids, drugs, cabohydrates, lipids, toxins, vitamins, indoles, antibiotics, peptides, pigments, phenols, bile acids, and coumarins in sample matrices such as blood, urine, feces, saliva, cerebrospinal fluids, body tissues, and other biologics are considered. The review discusses the advantage of using modern TLC for biological applications and summarizes important information on stationary and mobile phases and methods used for application of standards and samples, plate development, and zone detection, identification, and quantification.
J. Chromatogr. A 1218 (19), 2754-2774 (2011). HPTLC for lipid analysis is particularly useful for smaller, apolar compounds and offers some advantages over HPLC. Description of stationary phases, solvent systems and detection methods for the individual lipid classes (cholesterol and its derivates, glycerides, sphingo- and glycolipids, phospholipids). In comparison with common staining methods the combination of HPTLC and mass spectrometric detection methods is a very powerful method to investigate the identities of the HPTLC zones in detail.
J. Liq. Chromatogr. Relat. Technol. 32, 1711-1732 (2009). The authors described the TLC methods available for the analysis of acidic monosaccharides, disaccharides, and oligosaccharides derived from natural sources. TLC methods for the separation and visualization of monosaccharides are examined, as well as the successful application of TLC for ganglioside analysis and the application of these separations to neoglycolipids prepared from less tractable oligosaccharides and strong acidic animal polysaccharides, such as glycosaminoglycans.
J. Ethnopharmacol. 181, 236-251 (2016). Analysis of the botanical description, geographical location, traditional and medicinal uses, phytochemistry and pharmacological investigation, toxicological aspects, patent information and clinical studies of Symplocos racemosa. The review described methods for the determination of loturine in the bark extracts of Symplocos racemosa on silica gel with chloroform – acetonitrile – triethylamine 7:5:2, quantitative determination by absorbance measurement at 280 nm.