A multi-residue cation-exchange clean up procedure for basic drugs in produce of animal origin

2005 
There is considerable interest in maximising the amount of information obtained from animal product analyses, when screening for the presence of veterinary drug residues. One of the barriers to effective multi-residue analysis to date has been a lack of effective clean up procedures to isolate a wide range of residues from the potential interferents, which may be present in both simple and complex (including processed) foods. A cation-exchange clean up has, therefore, been developed for use with acetonitrile extracts of foods, when analysing for several basic drug groups (sulfonamides, benzimidazoles, levamisole, nitroimidazoles, tranquillisers and fluroquinolones). The clean up procedure has also been shown to be effective using a modified extraction solvent for malachite green and leucomalachite green in fish. Several of the key parameters that influence analyte recovery have been investigated and in an optimised procedure, tissue/biofluid samples containing sulfonamides, benzimidazoles, levamisole, nitroimidazoles, tranquillisers and fluoroquinolones are first extracted with acetonitrile. The extract is then dried with sodium sulfate and acidified with glacial acetic acid before loading onto a Bond Elut, strong cation-exchange (SCX) solid phase extraction (SPE) cartridge. Extracts from fish containing malachite green and leucomalachite green can be cleaned up using the same SCX SPE procedure following extraction with citrate buffer/acetonitrile. Typical recoveries of drugs from low level fortified tissues using the optimised procedure lie in the range 53–104% with the exception of carazolol from pig kidney (31%), malachite green from trout (42–51%) and ciprofloxacin from chicken muscle (44%) and from egg (21%).
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