Quantitative detection of organic mercury in whole blood using derivatization and gas chromatography-negative chemical ionization-mass spectrometry

Abstract

The Minamata disease, first identified in Japan in the 1950s, is caused by severe methylmercury (MeHg) poisoning. To prevent the development of this disease, routine evaluation of MeHg levels in blood samples is crucial. The purpose of this research was to explore the use of derivatization and capillary gas chromatography-negative chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (GC-NCI-MS) for the quantitative detection of both organic and inorganic mercury in blood samples. Alkyl mercury in standard solutions was extracted as halide salts in toluene with hydrohalic acid. Fat contents in whole blood samples were removed by methyl isobutyl ketone and hexane using a cysteine/alkaline solution and then organic mercury was extracted as a bromide complex using toluene and cupper chloride solution. The linearity of the response ratio vs. concentration curves (R2) was 0.987 for methylmercury bromide and 0.990 for ethylmercury (EtHg) bromide, over the calibration range of 0.02 ng/mL to 20 ng/mL. The recovery of MeHg and EtHg was 67.1% and 49.3%, respectively. The concentrations of MeHg in whole blood samples determined using GC with an electron capture detector agreed with those determined using GC-NCI-MS, with a correlation coefficient of 0.923. The mean concentration of MeHg in a certified reference material (NMIJ CRM 7402-a) determined using GC-NCI-MS was 0.64 μg/g, comparable with the certified value of 0.58 μg/g. Our study demonstrates a simple and low-cost approach for analyzing mercury in biological samples, although further optimization is required given the relatively low recovery and the concern about the toxicity of methyl isobutyl ketone

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