• Stable isotope-labeled. |
• Radioactive. |
• Commercially available as a powder. Does not degrade over time. Aqueous stock solutions can be frozen and stored for years. |
• Commercially available as a solution in ethanol. Degrades over time (∼0.5% per year) and older lots require labor-intensive purification on HPLC before use to get reproducible data. |
• Comparatively cheaper. |
• Expensive. |
• The method of detection is very specific and sensitive to molecular weight. As a result, unwanted artifacts do not affect brain uptake measurements. |
• Associated with lipophilic impurities which constitute 80% of brain uptake pharmacokinetically. |
• Detection is done through LC-MS/MS which can differentiate entities based on the molecular weight of the compound. |
• Detection is done through liquid scintillation counters which are not able to differentiate between actual sucrose uptake and lipophilic impurities. |