1 research outputs found
Time-Course Mass Spectrometry Imaging for Depicting Drug Incorporation into Hair
In order to investigate the incorporation
of drugs into hair, matrix-assisted
laser desorption/ionization–time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry
(MS/MS) imaging was performed on the longitudinal sections of single
scalp hair shafts sampled from volunteers after a single oral administration
of methoxyphenamine (MOP), a noncontrolled analogue of methamphetamine.
Hair specimens were collected by plucking out with the roots intact,
and these specimens were prepped by an optimized procedure based on
freeze-sectioning to detect the drug inside the hair shaft and hair
root. Time-course changes in the imaging results, with confirmatory
quantitative liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry
(LC–MS/MS) analysis for each 1-mm segment of single hair strands,
revealed a substantial concentration of the drug first onto the hair
bulbs after ingestion, while only a small portion appeared to be incorporated
into the hair matrix, forming a 2–3 mm distinctive drug band
with tailing. Comparable amount of the drug also appeared to be incorporated
into the keratinized hair shaft in the upper dermis zone, forming
another distinct drug band of about 2 mm, which both moved toward
the distal side, following the strand’s growth rate. These
findings provide forensically crucial information: there are two major
drug incorporation sites, at least for MOP, which cause overlap of
the recordings and deteriorates its chronological resolution down
to about 11 days or perhaps longer