Gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric identification and quantitation of benzyl alcohol in serum after derivatization with perfluorooctanoyl chloride: a new derivative

Dasgupta, A; Humphrey, PE

HERO ID

1718866

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1998

Language

English

PMID

9653977

HERO ID 1718866
In Press No
Year 1998
Title Gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric identification and quantitation of benzyl alcohol in serum after derivatization with perfluorooctanoyl chloride: a new derivative
Authors Dasgupta, A; Humphrey, PE
Journal Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications
Volume 708
Issue 1-2
Page Numbers 299-303
Abstract Benzyl alcohol is commonly used as an antibacterial agent in a variety of pharmaceutical formulations. Several fatalities in neonates have been linked to benzyl alcohol poisoning. Most methods for measuring benzyl alcohol concentrations in serum utilize direct extraction followed by high-performance liquid chromatography. We describe here a novel derivatization of benzyl alcohol using perfluorooctanoyl chloride after extraction from human serum for analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The derivative was eluted at a significantly higher temperature respective to underivatized molecule and the method was free from interferences from more volatile components in serum and hemolyzed specimens. Another advantage of this derivatization technique is the conversion of low-molecular-mass benzyl alcohol (Mr 108) to a high-molecular-mass derivative (Mr 504). The positive identification of benzyl alcohol can be achieved by observing a distinct molecular ion at m/z 504 as well as the base peak at m/z 91. Quantitation of benzyl alcohol in human serum can easily be achieved by using 3,4-dimethylphenol as an internal standard. The within run and between run precisions (using serum standard of benzyl alcohol: 25 mg/l) were 2.7% (mean=24.1, S.D.=0.66 mg/l, n = 8) and 4.2% (mean=24.3, S.D.=1.03 mg/l, n = 8), respectively. The assay was linear for the serum benzyl alcohol concentrations of 2 mg/l to 200 mg/l and the detection limit was 0.1 mg/l. We observed no carry-over (memory effect) problem in our assay as when 2 microl ethyl acetate was injected into the GC-MS system after analyzing serum specimens containing 200 mg/l of benzyl alcohol, we observed no peak for either benzyl alcohol or the internal standard in the total ion chromatogram.
Doi 10.1016/s0378-4347(97)00679-8
Pmid 9653977
Wosid WOS:000073968600037
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000073968600037Scopus URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0032562418&doi=10.1016%2fS0378-4347%2897%2900679-8&partnerID=40&md5=298ea72b2ec75f314374f348eee488bb
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword benzyl alcohol; perfluorooctanoyl chloride