1. Endogenous GHB in Segmented Hair Part I: Inter-individual Variation for Group Comparisons.
- Author
-
Thomas, Jennifer L, Strickland, Erin C, Lloyd, Erin W, Donnelly, Christopher C, Rankoth, Anusha, Pieczonka, Sandra M, Colpoys, Caroline, Smith, Michael A, LeBeau, Marc A, Montgomery, Madeline A, Karas, Roman P, Peters, Eugene M, and Miller, Mark L
- Subjects
- *
HAIR , *LOGNORMAL distribution , *HAIR growth , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *SCALP - Abstract
While earlier studies have attempted to resolve the challenges encountered when interpreting gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) concentrations in hair (primarily due to its endogenous presence), few have had large sample sizes. The first objective of this study was to evaluate the inter-individual variation of endogenous GHB concentrations. The second objective, to be detailed in another report, was to assess intra-individual variation and the impact on exogenous GHB discrimination. Over 2,000 hair segments from 141 women and 73 men (all processed hair 3–12 cm long) were analyzed in this study. The raw calculated range of endogenous GHB concentrations was <0.40–5.47 ng/mg with 97.5% of the segmental results calculated less than 2.00 ng/mg. Imputation, assuming a lognormal distribution, was applied to the data to include non-detect (ND) data (
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF