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Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation

Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology. While sensitive and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, current methods are time-consuming and too expensive for routine analysis. The aim of this study was therefore to design and val...

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Autores principales: Mohammadzaheri, Reza, Dogaheh, Mehdi Ansari, Kazemipour, Maryam, Soltaninejad, Kambiz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sciendo 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7837239/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32597136
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/aiht-2020-71-3292
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author Mohammadzaheri, Reza
Dogaheh, Mehdi Ansari
Kazemipour, Maryam
Soltaninejad, Kambiz
author_facet Mohammadzaheri, Reza
Dogaheh, Mehdi Ansari
Kazemipour, Maryam
Soltaninejad, Kambiz
author_sort Mohammadzaheri, Reza
collection PubMed
description Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology. While sensitive and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, current methods are time-consuming and too expensive for routine analysis. The aim of this study was therefore to design and validate a simple dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (DLLME) for the preparation of urine samples to be analysed for diazinon with high performance liquid chromatography with diode-array detector (HPLC-DAD) to establish diazinon exposure and poisoning. To do that, we first identified critical parameters (type and volume of extraction and disperser solvents, pH, surfactant, and salt concentrations) in preliminary experiments and then used central composite design to determine the best experimental conditions for DLLME-HPLC-DAD. For DLLME they were 800 µL of methanol (disperser solvent) and 310 µL of toluene (extraction solvent) injected to the urine sample rapidly via a syringe. The sample was injected into a HPLC-DAD (C(18) column, 250×4.6 mm, 5 μm), and the mobile phase was a mixture of acetonitrile and buffer (63:37 v/v, pH 3.2; flow rate: 1 mL/ min). Standard calibration curves for diazinon were linear with the concentration range of 0.5–4 µg/mL, yielding a regression equation Y=0.254X+0.006 with a correlation coefficient of 0.993. The limit of detection and limit of quantification for diazinon were 0.15 µg/mL and 0.45 µg/mL, respectively. The proposed method was accurate, precise, sensitive, and linear over a wide range of diazinon concentrations in urine samples. This method can be employed for diazinon analysis in routine clinical and forensic toxicology settings.
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spelling pubmed-78372392021-05-25 Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation Mohammadzaheri, Reza Dogaheh, Mehdi Ansari Kazemipour, Maryam Soltaninejad, Kambiz Arh Hig Rada Toksikol Original Article Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology. While sensitive and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, current methods are time-consuming and too expensive for routine analysis. The aim of this study was therefore to design and validate a simple dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (DLLME) for the preparation of urine samples to be analysed for diazinon with high performance liquid chromatography with diode-array detector (HPLC-DAD) to establish diazinon exposure and poisoning. To do that, we first identified critical parameters (type and volume of extraction and disperser solvents, pH, surfactant, and salt concentrations) in preliminary experiments and then used central composite design to determine the best experimental conditions for DLLME-HPLC-DAD. For DLLME they were 800 µL of methanol (disperser solvent) and 310 µL of toluene (extraction solvent) injected to the urine sample rapidly via a syringe. The sample was injected into a HPLC-DAD (C(18) column, 250×4.6 mm, 5 μm), and the mobile phase was a mixture of acetonitrile and buffer (63:37 v/v, pH 3.2; flow rate: 1 mL/ min). Standard calibration curves for diazinon were linear with the concentration range of 0.5–4 µg/mL, yielding a regression equation Y=0.254X+0.006 with a correlation coefficient of 0.993. The limit of detection and limit of quantification for diazinon were 0.15 µg/mL and 0.45 µg/mL, respectively. The proposed method was accurate, precise, sensitive, and linear over a wide range of diazinon concentrations in urine samples. This method can be employed for diazinon analysis in routine clinical and forensic toxicology settings. Sciendo 2020-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7837239/ /pubmed/32597136 http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/aiht-2020-71-3292 Text en © 2020 Reza Mohammadzaheri, Mehdi Ansari Dogaheh, Maryam Kazemipour, Kambiz Soltaninejad, published by Sciendo http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
spellingShingle Original Article
Mohammadzaheri, Reza
Dogaheh, Mehdi Ansari
Kazemipour, Maryam
Soltaninejad, Kambiz
Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title_full Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title_fullStr Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title_short Experimental Central Composite Design-based Dispersive Liquid-liquid Microextraction for HPLC-DAD Determination of Diazinon in Human Urine Samples: Method Development and Validation
title_sort experimental central composite design-based dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction for hplc-dad determination of diazinon in human urine samples: method development and validation
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7837239/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32597136
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/aiht-2020-71-3292
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