Rapid identification of pesticides in human oral fluid for emergency management by thermal desorption electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry

Self‐poisoning with pesticides accounts for approximately one‐third of all suicides worldwide. To expedite rescue in the emergency department, it is essential to develop a point‐of‐care analytical method for rapid identification of ingested pesticides. In this study, five of the most common pesticid...

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Published inJournal of mass spectrometry. Vol. 51; no. 2; pp. 97 - 104
Main Authors Lee, Chi-Wei, Su, Hung, Chen, Peng-Yu, Lin, Shiang-Jiun, Shiea, Jentaie, Shin, Shyi-Jang, Chen, Bai-Hsiun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.02.2016
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Self‐poisoning with pesticides accounts for approximately one‐third of all suicides worldwide. To expedite rescue in the emergency department, it is essential to develop a point‐of‐care analytical method for rapid identification of ingested pesticides. In this study, five of the most common pesticides ingested by self‐poisoning patients in Taiwan were analyzed from oral fluid samples. Pesticide‐oral fluid mixtures were applied on a cotton swab and then transferred into methanol. A metallic probe was used to sample the methanol solution for subsequent thermal desorption‐electrospray ionization mass spectrometry analysis. Altogether, pesticide sampling, transfer, desorption, ionization, and detection took less than 1 min. The reproducibility of this method (n = 6) was shown in the observed low‐relative standard deviation (<7%) in the detection of pesticide in oral fluid. The detection limits of the pesticides in oral fluid obtained from four human subjects by thermal desorption‐electrospray ionization mass spectrometry were between 1–10 ppb with relative standard deviation 10.7%. Moreover, in this study, linear responses of five pesticides in oral fluid with concentrations between 1 ppb–1 ppm (R2 between 0.9938 and 0.9988) were observed. As the whole analytical process is extremely short, this technique allows for early non‐invasive point‐of‐care identification of pesticides in the oral fluid of self‐poisoning patients in the emergency room, providing important toxicological information for decision‐making during critical resuscitation. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Bibliography:Ministry of Science and Technology - No. 104-2113-M-110-005-MY3
Supporting info item
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ArticleID:JMS3719
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ISSN:1076-5174
1096-9888
DOI:10.1002/jms.3719