A brief overview of the field of analytical artifacts is provided, with examples of solvent impurities, stabilizers, polymer additives, and problems relating to Teflon, glassware, and laboratory contaminants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sorption and desorption properties of graphitized carbon black (GCB) were evaluated for enrichment of highly polarizable chloramphenicol (CP) from biological fluids. The distribution of CP between GCB and water lay strongly toward GCB. Among the organic solvents examined, methanol gave the lowest adsorption coefficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPresent methods for the development of metabolic profiles are limited to the use of headspace techniques and solvent extraction methods. A new method for the development of saliva profiles which provides information complementary to existing analyses has been developed. The results of the developed methodology provide a reliable, reproducible method for metabolic profiling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcrylamide in biological samples can be determined by gas chromatography with electron-capture detection after conversion to its 2,3-dibromopropionamide derivative. The derivatization is carried out in aqueous solution, plasma or tissue homogenates by ionic bromination and the reaction conditions and sample clean-up are described. The detection limit corresponds to 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe organic volatile constituents of biological fluids contain clinically useful diagnostic information for the recognition of metabolic disorders in man. To gain access to this information, it was necessary to develop the methodology for reproducibly stripping the trace concentrations of volatiles from biological fluids (dynamic headspace, gas phase-stripping, solvent extraction, and the transevaporator technique), to separate the complex extracts by high-resolution capillary column gas chromatography, and to develop computer-aided data-handling and pattern-recognition techniques for analyzing the immense amount of information generated. The normal and pathological organic volatiles identified by gas chromatography--mass spectrometry in urine, serum, and breast milk are tabulated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGuaifenesin after extraction from plasma with an organic solvent can be selectively derivatized with 2,4-dichlorobenzeneboronic acid and determined by gas chromatography with electron-capture detection. The detection limit for guaifenesin was 15 ng ml-1 for a 2.0-ml plasma sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe response of the electron-capture detector to organic compounds is poorly defined, and the steroids are no exception to this observation. For those steroids which are naturally electron-capturing, the structures of the electrophores will be defined. Other steroids can be made electron-capturing by the formation of appropriate derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe profiles of volatile metabolites in serum samples from normal individuals and from individuals with diabetes mellitus with varying degrees of polyneuropathy have been studied. The transevaporator procedure was used to obtain sample extracts which were chromatographed on a highly efficient glass column coated with Silar 10C (106 m x 0.25 mm I.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing a transevaporator sampling technique, the volatile profiles from 70 microliter of serum were obtained by capillary-column gas chromatography. The complex chromatograms were interpreted by a combination of manual and computer techniques and a two-peak ratio method devised for the classification of normal and virus-infected sera. Using the K-nearest neighbor approach 85.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr
October 1978
A method is described for the determination of sucrose in molasses by high-performance thin-layer chromatography. A baseline separation of sucrose is achieved in about 40 min using acetone--water (90:10) as developing solvent. The relative standard deviation of determinations by this method is about 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA method is described for the determination of antiarrhythmia drugs in serum by high-performance thin-layer chromatography. Baseline separations are achieved for all the drugs and clozapine, an internal standard, in two developments with solvents of different polarity. Lidocaine and diphenylhydantoin are scanned at 220 nm after the first development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-performance thin-layer chromatography affords a rapid, sensitive method for determination of psychopharmacologic agents in blood serum samples. Quantitation of the representative drugs chlorpromazine, amitriptyline, nortriptyline, imipramine, and desipramine at levels as low as 5 ng/ml is demonstrated by scanning the developed thin-layer plates with a chromatographic spectrophotometer in the ultraviolet absorption mode. Neither derivatization prior to, nor color development after chromatographic separation is required to achieve sensitivity and reproducibility of determinations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNickel tubing may be substituted for glass in the fabrication of gas chromatographic columns for use with samples of biological interest. Comparisons of separations of mixtures of steroids, narcotic alkaloids, phenothiazines, and amphetamines on stainless stell, glass, and nickel packed columns showed little or no observable sample decomposition on glass or nickel as contrasted to complete loss of certain compounds on stainless steel. The nickel columns are easily prepared, durable, economical, and not subject to breakage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe compounds 2-isopropyl-4,5-dihydrothiazole and 2-sec-butyl-4,5-dihydrothiazole were identified in urine of male mice. Their excretion in mouse urine is sex-dependent. In the urine of female mice the two dihydrothiazoles are either absent or present only in trace amounts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA method for the analysis of volatile metabolites present in plasma, urine, breast milk and amniotic fluid collected from mother-infant pairs has been developed which requires only 100 mul of plasma, 3 ml of urine, 20 mul of breast milk and 500 mul of amniotic fluid. After extraction with diethyl ether, the volatile compounds were absorbed on glass wool in a special concentration tube and subsequently desorbed and transferred to a 100-m nickel capillary column for analysis by gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The separations, carried out by temperature programming, were complete in 90 min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr
November 1976
A new solvent elution method is described for the isolation and concentration of volatile metabolites in biological fluids. The procedure involves elution of the sample with a solvent through a micro-column of an adsorbent into glass-wool and evaporation of the excess solvent in a stream of helium at room temperature. The volatiles are revocered by subsequent heat desorption into a chromatogrpaphic system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new method for analyzing volatile metabolites in biological fluids and tissues has been developed. The procedure involves extraction of the sample with diethyl ether, concentration on a short column of glass wool by elution of the diethyl ether, then thermal desorption of the trace constituents into a chromatographic system. Small samples of 100 mul are quite adequate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN-Trifluoroacetyl-L-methionyl-L-methionine cyclohexyl ester as well as the disulfide and disulfone derivatives of this phase have been synthesized. The methionine phase exhibits improved properties as a stationary phase for the separation of amino acid enantiomers as compared to other dipeptide stationary phases and can be used at temperatures ranging from 70 to 150 degrees. The sulfoxide phase, however, was incapable of resolving the enantiomeric derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the aliphatic alcohols in 100 urines from 25 patients with diabetes mellitus under treatment with insulin, oral antidiabetic medication, or special diet. The procedure involves adsorption of the low-molecular-weight urinary metabolites on a porous polymer of 2,6-diphenyl-p-phenylene oxide (Tenax GC), gas-chromatographic separation, mass spectrometric identification, and mass fragmentographic representation of the primary alcohols by a computer. The concentrations of ethanol, n-propanol, isobutanol, n-butanol, and isopentanol are increased as compared with urine from normal persons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAviat Space Environ Med
August 1975
The volatile organic components in the spacecraft cabin atmosphere of Skylab 4 were trapped on a solid adsorbent at various times during the mission. In post-flight analyses, more than 300 compounds in concentrations from less than 1 ppb up to 8000 ppb could be detected by high-resolution gas chromatography. In the samples of the 11th, 47th, and 77th day of the mission, approximately 100 components in the molecular weight range of 58 to 592 were identified by mass spectrometry.
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