4 research outputs found

    Response to letter regarding “Evidence of natural occurence of the banned antibiotic chloramphenicol in herbs and grass”

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    # The Author(s) 2011. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com We were surprised to read that the natural occurrence of chloramphenicol (CAP) was reported as long ago as 2003 by Hanekamp et al. [1]. We missed that information, probably because their findings were not published in a peer-reviewed journal. In our paper [2], we did not claim to be the first to suggest the natural occurrence of CAP; on the contrary, we included several references from earlier studies. We stated that our paper was the first to describe the detection of CAP in plant materials, sample material which had not been addressed before. Furthermore, there is an important issue which is not raised by Hanekamp et al. and that is the issue of ‘criteria for confirmation of the identity of a compound’. InEU legislation, viz. Commission Decision 2002/657/EC, it i

    Fully automated screening of veterinary drugs in milk by turbulent flow chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry

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    There is an increasing interest in screening methods for quick and sensitive analysis of various classes of veterinary drugs with limited sample pre-treatment. Turbulent flow chromatography in combination with tandem mass spectrometry has been applied for the first time as an efficient screening method in routine analysis of milk samples. Eight veterinary drugs, belonging to seven different classes were selected for this study. After developing and optimising the method, parameters such as linearity, repeatability, matrix effects and carry-over were studied. The screening method was then tested in the routine analysis of 12 raw milk samples. Even without internal standards, the linearity of the method was found to be good in the concentration range of 50 to 500 ”g/L. Regarding repeatability, RSDs below 12% were obtained for all analytes, with only a few exceptions. The limits of detection were between 0.1 and 5.2 ”g/L, far below the maximum residue levels for milk set by the EU regulations. While matrix effects—ion suppression or enhancement—are obtained for all the analytes the method has proved to be useful for screening purposes because of its sensitivity, linearity and repeatability. Furthermore, when performing the routine analysis of the raw milk samples, no false positive or negative results were obtained

    Quantitative trace analysis of a broad range of antiviral drugs in poultry muscle using column-switch liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry

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    A liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry method for the analysis of seven antiviral drugs, zanamivir, ribavirin, oseltamivir, oseltamivir carboxylate, amantadine, rimantadine and arbidol, in poultry muscle is reported. The antiviral drugs were extracted from the homogenized poultry muscle sample using methanol. The extract was purified using tandem solid-phase extraction combining a cation exchange cartridge and a phenylboronic acid cartridge. To prevent excessive matrix effects, the analytes were separated from the matrix constituents using a column-switch liquid chromatography system combining a reversed-phase and a Hypercarb analytical column. Detection was carried out using tandem mass spectrometry. The method was fully validated according to 2002/657/EC [1] and proved to be adequate for quantification and confirmation of zanamivir and ribavirin at 10 Όg kg−1, oseltamivir, oseltamivir carboxylate, amantadine and rimantadine at levels below 1.0 Όg kg−1 and for qualitative confirmatory analysis of arbidol at levels below 1 Όg kg−1
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