46 results on '"Maciej J. Bogusz"'
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2. Challenges Posed by Novel Psychoactive Substances – Middle East Perspective
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
New psychoactive substances (NPS) are defined as substances of abuse, either in a pure form or a preparation, that are not controlled by the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs or the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances, but which may pose a public health threat. In this context, the term “new” does not necessarily refer to new inventions but to substances that have recently become available or popular in a given society or country. This definition indicates that the problem of NPS is not new; however, the availability of any information via new communication technologies in the 21st century has enabled the spread of unwanted and socially harmful information, like information on the commercial availability of various NPS, offered in rising amounts and brands.
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- 2017
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3. Quality Assurance of Forensic-Toxicological Analysis: Selected Issues
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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quality assurance ,forensic toxicological analysis ,quality control ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
In the present paper, recent trends in the formulation and application of quality assurance (QA) parameters in forensic toxicology, as well as the selected validated applications published in the last five years, are reviewed. In the first part, QA aspects of the analysis of toxicologically relevant compounds in various materials are presented. In particular, QA aspects of analysis of various matrices, like seized street drugs, formalin fixed tissues, dried blood spots, oral fluid, hair, and nails are reviewed. The second part is devoted to identification as applied in general, untargeted and targeted screening; regulations and recommendations issued on international and national levels are presented in the third part, whereas existing QA programs applicable for forensic analysis are discussed in the fourth part.
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- 2015
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4. Hyphenated techniques in liquid chromatography and their applications in forensic toxicology: A review
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Sachil Kumar and Maciej J Bogusz
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chemical warfare agents ,chromatography ,drug abuse ,forensic toxicology ,hazardous substances ,high-pressure liquid ,mass spectrometry ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Conventional analytical methods, such as gas chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography (LC), ultra-violet, and others, are ineffective in addressing the increasing number of problems in forensic toxicology. Hyphenated analytical methods, wherein the separation method are coupled or combined with spectral methods, with the help of a proper interface, are the available alternative options. The key benefits of these methods are the requisites of low limits for detection, shorter analytical time, the possibility of automation, better reproducibility, and high precision and repeatability. This review discusses on some of the hyphenated analytical methods that involve LC as the separation tool, for their most recent applications in the area of forensic toxicology focusing on the screening of drugs of abuse, the usage of alternative matrices for monitoring drug abuse, analysis of chemical warfare agents, determination of doping agents and related substances, natural toxins, environmental poisons, and examination of food produce adulteration. The incorporation of the more user-friendly LC-interfaces, such as atmospheric pressure chemical ionization, and electrospray ionization in the LC- mass spectrometry has increased the popularity of this technique tremendously among scientists of different disciplines. Hyphenated approaches have extremely low constraints regarding the identification and quantification, and offer high reproducibility, with unparalleled potential.
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- 2021
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5. Detection of Non-Prescription Heroin Markers in Urine with Liquid Chromatography--Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry
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Maciej J. Bogusz, Manfred Erkens, U. Kohls, and Rolf-Dieter Maier
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Adult ,Narcotics ,Vasodilator Agents ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Urine ,Toxicology ,Mass spectrometry ,Drug Prescriptions ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Papaverine ,medicine ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Selected ion monitoring ,Solid phase extraction ,Chemical ionization ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Codeine ,Heroin Dependence ,Chemistry ,Noscapine ,Heroin ,Biomarkers ,Chromatography, Liquid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The planned introduction of a prescription heroin program in Germany created a need for differentiation between non-prescription and prescribed diamorphine use. The following substances were chosen as markers of non-prescription heroin: acetylcodeine (AC); its metabolites codeine (C) and codeine 6-glucuronide (C6G); papaverine (P); and noscapine (N). Typical heroin markers diamorphine (DAM) and its metabolites monoacetylmorphine (MAM) and morphine (M) were also determined. The drugs were extracted from urine samples with solid-phase extraction (C18) using standard 200-mg columns and 96-well microplates (100 mg). The extracts were examined with liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (positive ionization) in two isocratic systems. Selected ion monitoring procedures were applied for protonated molecular masses and characteristic fragments of drugs involved. The limits of detection were in the range of 0.5-1 ng/mL urine. The occurrence of selected heroin markers was investigated in 25 urine samples collected from heroin abusers (road traffic offenders and overdosed patients). C6G was found in all samples, C in 24 samples, N in 22 samples, MAM in 16 samples, P in 14 samples, DAM in 12 samples, and AC in 4 samples. The appearance of these compounds in urine reflects their pharmacokinetic properties and the composition of non-prescription heroin.
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- 2001
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6. Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry as a routine method in forensic sciences: a proof of maturity
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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Bromazepam ,Chromatography ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Phenethylamines ,General Chemistry ,Forensic Medicine ,Dihydrocodeine ,Mass Spectrometry ,Psilocybin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Atmospheric Pressure ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,chemistry ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Psilocin ,Benzoylecgonine ,medicine ,Humans ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The applications of LC-API-MS in routine forensic toxicological casework were presented. This technique has been used for routine determination of several groups of drugs: opiate agonists (like morphine, codeine, dihydrocodeine and their glucuronides, methadone, buprenorphine) cocaine and its metabolites (benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester), amphetamine and other psychoactive phenethylamines, like MDMA, MDE or MDA, benzodiazepine derivatives (flunitrazepam and metabolites, triazolam, bromazepam), hallucinogens (LSD, psilocybin, psilocin) and olanzapine, A common solid-phase extraction procedure for all drugs (with exception of LSD) has been developed. Among two ionization sources, atmospheric pressure chemical ionization appeared more universal and assured generally higher sensitivity. Only in the case of very polar drugs (e.g. psilocin or psilocybin) electrospray ionization was more sensitive. LC-API-MS became a very powerful and flexible method for dedicated analyses of substances of forensic interest. The use of this technique for general, broad applicable screening depends on the establishing of interlaboratory database of standardized mass spectra.
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- 2000
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7. Analysis of Underivatized Amphetamines and Related Phenethylamines with High-Performance Liquid Chromatography-Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry
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Rolf-Dieter Maier, Maciej J. Bogusz, and Klaus-Dieter Krüger
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Chemical ionization ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Amphetamines ,Reproducibility of Results ,Phenethylamines ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Toxicology ,Mass spectrometry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Blood serum ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Selected ion monitoring ,Solid phase extraction ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
Amphetamine, methamphetamine, illicit designer phenethylamines (MDA, MDEA, MDMA, MBDB, and BDMPEA), and other phenethylamines (benzyl-1-phenylethylamine, cathinone, ephedrine, fenfluramine, norfenfluramine, phentermine, 1-phenylethylamine, phenylpropanolamine, and propylhexedrine) were extracted from serum using a solid-phase extraction procedure. The extracts were examined with high-performance liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS). The drugs were separated on ODS column in acetonitrile/50 mM ammonium formate buffer (pH 3.0) (25:75) as a mobile phase. Full-scan mass spectra of drugs examined by means of APCI with collision-induced dissociation showed protonated molecular ions and fragments typical for particular drugs. LC-APCI-MS allowed an unequivocal differentiation of all drugs involved. The quantitation was performed using selected ion monitoring of protonated molecular ions and fragments of drugs involved and their deuterated analogues. The limits of detection ranged from 1 to 5 microg/L serum, and the recoveries ranged from 58 to 96%. A linear response was observed for all drugs in the range from 5 to 500 microg/L. The method was applied for routine determination of amphetamine, MDMA, MDA, and MDEA in one run. Solid-phase extraction used assured simultaneous isolation of various groups of basic drugs of forensic interest (opiates, cocaines, phenethylamines, and benzodiazepines) from biofluids.
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- 2000
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8. Determination of flunitrazepam and its metabolites in blood by high-performance liquid chromatography–atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry
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Wiebke Früchtnicht, Maciej J. Bogusz, Rolf-Dieter Maier, and Klaus-Dieter Krüger
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Detection limit ,Chemical ionization ,Chromatography ,Metabolite ,Reproducibility of Results ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Flunitrazepam ,General Chemistry ,Forensic Medicine ,Mass spectrometry ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Mass Spectrometry ,Substance Abuse Detection ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Anti-Anxiety Agents ,chemistry ,Mass spectrum ,Ammonium formate ,Humans ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
A selective assay of flunitrazepam (F) and its metabolites 7-aminoflunitrazepam (7-AF), N-desmethylflunitrazepam (N-DF) and 3-hydroxyflunitrazepam (3-OHF) with liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS, positive ions) is described. The drugs were isolated from serum, blood or urine using a solid-phase extraction procedure previously applied to various drugs of abuse. F-d3 and 7-AF-d3 were used as internal standards. The drugs were separated on ODS column in acetonitrile-50 mM ammonium formate buffer, pH 3.0 (45:55, v/v). After analysis of mass spectra taken in full scan mode, a selected-ion monitoring detection was applied with following ions: m/z 284 (7-AF and F), 287 (7-AF-d3 and F-d3), 314 (F), 300 (N-DF and 3-OHF), 317 (F-d3), 330 (3-OHF). The limits of detection were: 0.2 microg/l for F and 7-AF, 1 microg/l for N-DF and 3-OHF. The method was linear in the range 1-500 microg/l, the recoveries ranged from 92 to 99%. The method was applied for determination of F and metabolites in clinical and forensic samples. LC-APCI-MS seems to be a method of choice for these compounds.
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- 1998
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9. Determination of morphine and its 3- and 6-glucuronides, codeine, codeine-glucuronide and 6-monoacetylmorphine in body fluids by liquid chromatography atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry
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Sarah Driessen, Manfred Erkens, Maciej J. Bogusz, and Rolf-Dieter Maier
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Morphine Derivatives ,Chemical ionization ,Chromatography ,Morphine ,Codeine ,Reproducibility of Results ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,General Chemistry ,Mass spectrometry ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Mass Spectrometry ,Body Fluids ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Codeine-6-glucuronide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,medicine ,Humans ,6-Monoacetylmorphine ,Chromatography, Liquid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A selective assay of morphine-3-glucuronide (M3G), morphine-6-glucuronide (M6G), morphine, codeine, codeine-6-glucuronide (C6G) and 6-monoacetylmorphine (6-MAM) based on liquid chromatography atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS) is described. The drugs were extracted from serum, autopsy blood, urine, cerebrospinal fluid or vitreous humor using C18 solid-phase extraction cartridges and subjected to LC-APCI-MS analysis. The separation was performed on an ODS column in acetonitrile-50 mM ammonium formate buffer, pH 3.0 (5:95), using a flow-rate gradient from 0.6 to 1.1 ml/min (total analysis time was 17 min). The quantitative analysis was done using deuterated analogues of each compound. Selected-ion monitoring detection was applied: m/z 286 (for morphine, M3G-aglycone and M6G-aglycone), 289 (for morphine-d3, M3G-d3-aglycone and M6G-d3-aglycone), 300 (for codeine and C6G-aglycone), 303 (for C6G-d3-aglycone), 306 (for codeine-d6), 328 (for 6-MAM), 334 (for 6-MAM-d6), 462 (for M3G and M6G), 465 (for M3G-d3 and M6G-d3), 476 (for C6G) and 479 (for C6G-d3). The limits of quantitation were: 1 microg/l for morphine, 2 microg/l for 6-MAM, 5 microg/l for M3G, M6G and codeine and 200 microg/I for C6G. The recovery ranged from 85 to 98% for each analyte. The method appeared very selective and may be used for the routine determination of opiates in body fluids of heroin abusers and patients treated with opiates.
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- 1997
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10. Morphine, Morphine-3-Glucuronide, Morphine-6-Glucuronide, and 6-Monoacetylmorphine Determined by Means of Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization-Mass Spectrometry-Liquid Chromatography in Body Fluids of Heroin Victims
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Maciej J. Bogusz, Sarah Driessen, and Rolf-Dieter Maier
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Adult ,Male ,Narcotics ,Adolescent ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Urine ,Toxicology ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Selected ion monitoring ,Morphine-3-glucuronide ,Morphine Derivatives ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Morphine ,Heroin Dependence ,Morphine-6-glucuronide ,Heroin ,Vitreous Body ,Atmospheric Pressure ,chemistry ,Female ,Autopsy ,6-Monoacetylmorphine ,Glucuronide ,Chromatography, Liquid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Morphine, morphine-3-glucuronide (M3G), morphine-6-glucuronide (M6G), and 6-monoacetylmorphine (6-MAM) were isolated from body fluids using solid-phase extraction and determined by means of atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry-liquid chromatography (APCI-LC-MS) in selected ion monitoring mode. The following ions were monitored: m/z 286 for morphine; m/z 286 and 462 for M3G and M6G; m/z 211, 268, and 328 for 6-MAM; and m/z 289 for morphine-d3 (internal standard). The recoveries ranged from 82 to 89% The limits of detection were as follows: 0.1 ng/mL (morphine), 0.5 ng/mL (6-MAM), and 1 ng/mL (M3G and M6G). The analytes were determined in samples taken from 21 heroin-overdose victims. Twenty-one blood samples, 11 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples, 12 vitreous humor (VH) samples, and 6 urine samples were investigated. Blood concentrations (ng/mL) of morphine ranged from 8 to 1539, of M3G from 111 to 941, of M6G from 32 to 332, and of 6-MAM from 0 to 73. The levels of morphine were correlated with glucuronide values and with 6-MAM. The concentrations of morphine, M3G, and M6G in CSF were, as a rule, lower than in blood and lower in VH than in CSF. The concentrations of morphine and molar ratios of M6G-morphine in blood and CSF were correlated. Low ratios of M3G-morphine and M6G-morphine in blood of heroin-overdose victims indicated short survival time after drug intake.
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- 1997
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11. Comparability of RP-HPLC Retention Indices of Drugs in Three Databases
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Maciej J. Bogusz, Astrid Rehorek, and Dennis W. Hill
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Qualitative analysis ,Chromatography ,Database ,Chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Kovats retention index ,computer.software_genre ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,computer ,Analyse qualitative ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Three databases of HPLC retention indices in the 1-nitroalkane scale were recently established (IFM = Institute of Forensic Medicine, MCL = Microchemistry Laboratory, MTSS = Merck Tox Screening System). In two of them (IFM and MTSS) virtually identical chromatographic conditions were applied but different RP-columns. In the third system (MCL) a different column and different elution conditions were used. Among a total of 1149 drugs examined in all three labs, 258 drugs were common for IFM and MTSS, 179 were common for MCL and MTSS, 162 were common for IFM and MCL, and 135 drugs were common for all three databases. Good agreement of retention index values in IFM and MTSS was demonstrated (r2 = 0.9778). The correlations between IFM and MCL and MTSS and MCL data were less strong (r2 = 0.9245 and 0.9339, respectively), due to some deviating results. These deviations concerned mainly substances with pKa values between 1–4 and were probably caused by the differences in the pH of the two mobile phases. ...
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- 1996
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12. Quality Assurance in the Pathology Laboratory : Forensic, Technical, and Ethical Aspects
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Maciej J. Bogusz and Maciej J. Bogusz
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- Medical care--Quality control, Quality control, Pathology, Forensic pathology, Pathological laboratories--Law and legislation, Pathological laboratories--Standards, Diagnosis, Laboratory--Quality control, Diagnosis, Laboratory
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Quality refers to the amount of the unpriced attributes contained in each unit of the priced attribute.Leffler, 1982Quality is neither mind nor matter, but a third entity independent of the two, even though Quality cannot be defined, you know what it is.Pirsig, 2000The continuous formulation of good practices and procedures across fields reflects t
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- 2011
13. Trends in occurrence of drugs of abuse in blood and urine of arrested drivers and drug traffickers in the border region of Aachen
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H. Althoff, Karl-Heinz Schiwy-Bochat, Josefina Alvarez Vega, and Maciej J. Bogusz
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Drug ,Automobile Driving ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Poison control ,Urine ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Occupational safety and health ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Cocaine ,Germany ,Environmental health ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Retrospective Studies ,media_common ,Psychotropic Drugs ,education.field_of_study ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,Road traffic safety ,Incidence ,Medical jurisprudence ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Drug and Narcotic Control ,business ,Law ,computer - Abstract
The region of Aachen is located in a triangle on the German, Dutch and Belgian borders and is heavily exposed to drug traffic, due to the differences in national drug policies. The analysis of toxicological casework in the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Aachen was undertaken for the period 1987–1993, i.e. 6 years before and 1 year after the partial suspension of the border control due to the Maastricht Treaty; 2653 cases were registered, among them 988 automobile drivers. The profile of the casework has changed after the opening of the border: up to 1992 most cases were obtained from the customs. In 1993 the prevalence of police samples was noticed. In the population of drivers, blood samples were only taken in 30% of all the cases. In other cases, concerning mainly motorized drug smugglers, only urine samples or seized drugs have been sent for examination. The urine samples in this group were mostly drug-positive. Drug-smuggling drivers appeared to be a risk-generating group for road traffic safety. The analyses of blood and urine samples revealed multiple drug use in most of the cases. Since 1992, a steep increase in the frequency of cocaine-positive blood samples among drivers was noticed. The results of the study indicate that the abolition of the border control affected the road traffic safety in the region of Aachen.
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- 1995
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14. Interlaboratory Applicability of a Retention Index Library of Drugs For Screening by reversed phase HPLC in Systematic Toxicological Analysis
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Jp Franke, Jaap Wijsbeek, Maciej J. Bogusz, Ra Dezeeuw, and M Erkens
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Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Medical screening ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Kovats retention index ,Silica column ,Reversed-phase chromatography ,Drug intoxication ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
The retention indices (RI) of 47 selected acidic, neutral and basic drugs were determined on 7 reversed-phase (octyl- and octadecylsilica) columns in two laboratories in the 1-nitroalkane scale, using either 1-nitroalkane homologues or selected drugs, whose RI values were previously determined on the reference column. Obtained values were compared with the library values, determined previously on the reference column. Retention indices, calculated with drugs as RI markers, showed distinctly lower deviations from the library values and lower inter-column variability: The mean standard deviation of RI for all drugs analyzed on all columns in the 1-nitroalkane scale was 44.3 RI units, against 10.3 units when selected drugs were used as RI markers. The deviations from the listed values, calculated for each column separately with drugs as markers, were in 95% of cases smaller than 20 RI units, and in 80 % smaller than 10 units. The largest differences between the experimental and listed values were ob...
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- 1993
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15. An overview on the standardization of chromatographic methods for screening analysis in toxicology by means of retention indices and secondary standards
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J.P. Franke, Rokus A. de Zeeuw, Manfred Erkens, and Maciej J. Bogusz
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Chromatography ,Standardization ,Index system ,Stationary phase ,Silica column ,Kovats retention index ,Biochemistry ,Mathematics ,Screening analysis - Abstract
A review is presented on the methods of standardization of HPLC data as used in systematic toxicological analysis. In straight-phase HPLC, the best results were obtained with a series of selected drugs as retention standards. In reversed-phase HPLC, various retention index systems were introduced. However, these systems alone cannot compensate large differences in selectivities of nominally identical, but commercially different reversed-phase column packings. Much better results were achieved with selected drugs as retention index markers. The practical applicability of such a standardized HPLC system is demonstrated.
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- 1993
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16. An overview on the standardization of chromatographic methods for screening analysis in toxicology by means of retention indices and secondary standards
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Jp Franke, Ra Dezeeuw, and Maciej J. Bogusz
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Toxicology ,Chromatography ,Standardization ,Chemistry ,Extensive data ,Kovats retention index ,Gas chromatography ,Biochemistry ,Screening analysis - Abstract
In systematic toxicological analysis, in which a logical analytical search for a potentially harmful substance has to be carried out, chromatographic methods are of utmost importance since the retention parameter can be used for primary identification. In gas chromatography the Kovats retention index (RI) system is generally accepted for standardization of the retention. In order to increase the reproducibility of the interlaboratory RI, secondary standards for RI calculation have proven to be very useful. The best secondary standards are those that are structurally resembling the substances under investigation. For example, for general toxicological screening analysis, mixtures of drugs are recommended. Stationary phases consisting of Carbowax are most extensively used for solvents and volatile compounds; for less volatile compounds SE-30/OV-1/dimethylsilicone stationary phases have proven to be useful. For these types of stationary phases extensive data compilations comprising over 6000 substances are available for use in toxicology.
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- 1993
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17. Preface to first edition
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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- 2008
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18. Preface to second edition
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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- 2008
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19. Chapter 1 Opioids: methods of forensic analysis
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Maciej J. Bogusz
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business.industry ,Morphine derivatives ,Pharmacology ,OPIATE AGONISTS ,computer.software_genre ,Opioid ,Biological fluids ,medicine ,Separation method ,Artificial intelligence ,Semisynthetic opiates ,Opiate ,business ,computer ,Natural language processing ,Field conditions ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the use of separation methods for the isolation, identification, and quantitative analysis of natural and synthetic opiates. The term “opiate” refers specifically to the products derived from the opium poppy. The chapter describes morphine derivatives and synthetic or semisynthetic opiates, showing agonistic action at opioid receptors OP 1 ( δ ), OP 2 ( κ ) or OP 3 ( μ ). Preliminary testing for the opiates in field conditions is mainly performed by law-enforcement officers (police, prison, or customs officers). The testing devices are simple and robust and usually based on well-known color reactions. The main purpose of these tests is to select suspicious samples or materials for possible further examination with confirmatory methods. Preliminary methods used for biological fluids may be divided according to different criteria. From the technical point of view, these methods are divided into onsite and laboratory tests. These two groups of tests are discussed in the chapter in detail. Immunoassays are the most important techniques used for the preliminary testing of opiate agonists. The trend toward the use of immunoassays for alternative samples available in a noninvasive way—for example, saliva or sweat—is described in the chapter.
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- 2008
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20. Rapid determination of chloramphenicol and its glucuronide in food products by liquid chromatography-electrospray negative ionization tandem mass spectrometry
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Mohammed Al-Tufail, Huda Hassan, Zuhour Ibrahim, Eid Al-Enazi, and Maciej J. Bogusz
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Electrospray ,Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Chromatography ,Elution ,Chemistry ,Metabolite ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Matrix (chemical analysis) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chloramphenicol ,Glucuronides ,Solid phase extraction ,Glucuronide ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Food Analysis - Abstract
Chloramphenicol (CAP) is subjected to monitoring in food products, with a minimum required performance level set at 0.3 ng/g. CAP was isolated from chicken meat and seafood by very simple solvent extraction procedure. For honey, a fast SPE procedure was applied. CAP-D5 was used as internal standard. HPLC separation was done on RP18 123 mm x 3 mm column in acetonitrile-ammonium formate 10 mM, pH 3.0 (40:60) at flow rate of 0.3 ml/min. A TSQ Quantum instrument with ESI source has been used in negative ionization mode. A MRM procedure has been applied and following transitions were monitored: m/z 321 > 152 (quantifier), 321 > 194, 321 > 257(qualifiers), 326 > 157 (IS). CAP peak was eluted at around 5 min; the total run time was 7 min. LOD was around 0.1 ng/g meat or 0.05 ng/g honey. Matrix effects were studied for all materials used, involving injection of blank extracts with post-column infusion of CAP, as well as checking the influence of the co-injected blank extracts on the signal intensity of CAP. No influence of matrix on the results of CAP determination were observed. The method allows analyzing up to 30 duplicate samples per day, including all calibration standards. Additionally, the method for determination of CAP glucuronide (CAP-G) was established, using urine from rats that were given this drug as a source of the metabolite. Full validation of the metabolite was not possible, due to the unavailability of reference standard.
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- 2004
21. Chapter 23 Forensic analysis
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Maciej J. Bogusz and Angel Carracedo
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Reproducibility ,Chromatography ,Application areas ,Chemistry ,General screening ,High selectivity ,Clinical toxicology ,Mass spectrometry - Abstract
Publisher Summary The analysis of illicit drugs is one of the important challenges of forensic and clinical toxicology. Thin-layer chromatography (TLC) is used extensively as a screening technique for the detection and presumptive identification of poisons in preparations, in urine, or in stomach contents. Because of its limited sensitivity and specificity, it is not recommended for blood analysis. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC/MS) is also used in the analysis of illicit drugs; it will retain its position in the general screening and analysis of volatile compounds. The success of GC/MS in this field is based on features such as very high separation efficiency of capillary columns, high inter-laboratory reproducibility of retention parameters, and high selectivity and reproducibility of electron impact (EI)-generated mass spectra. Liquid chromatography (LC) is in the process of rapid development with respect to both separation and detection. In the near future, the use of affordable, bench-top tandem LC/MS instruments will be ubiquitous. The application areas of LC/MS will practically cover the entire spectrum of compounds of forensic relevance.
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- 2004
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22. How natural are 'natural herbal remedies'? A Saudi perspective
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Mohammed Al Tufail, Huda Hassan, and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Saudi Arabia ,Heavy metals ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Synthetic drugs ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Research centre ,Metals, Heavy ,Neoplasms ,Rheumatic Diseases ,medicine ,Herbal preparations ,Sample Type ,Humans ,Obesity ,Plant Preparations ,business ,Drug Contamination ,Rheumatism ,Phytotherapy - Abstract
Objective: There is a rapidly growing trend in the consumption of herbal remedies in industrialised and developing countries. Users of herbal remedies are at risk of toxicity and adverse interactions of herbal preparations due to their frequent contamination with metals and adulteration with synthetic drugs. The purpose of this study was to assess the quality of herbal remedies present on the market in Saudi Arabia in recent years. Methodology: 247 herbal remedies and related preparations were examined from 2000–2001 at the Toxicology Laboratory, King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Herbal powder samples were the most common sample type examined (n = 80), followed by complete, packed preparations (n = 59), single undescribed capsules or pills (n = 46), loose plant leaves or seeds (n = 28), creams (n = 18) and liquid or jelly samples (n = 16). All samples were subjected to toxicological screening for organic substances using gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric analysis, screening for heavy metals (arsenic, mercury, and lead) using inductive coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and microbiological examination. Results: The preparations analysed were used to treat the following indications: leukaemia and other forms of cancer (n = 22); obesity (n = 18); diabetes mellitus (n =14); rheumatic disorders (n = 14); skin pigmentation problems (n = 11); or to enhance male sexual activity (n = 9). In 123 cases, the indication of use was not known. 39 samples contained high concentrations of heavy metals. This was particularly striking in remedies used to treat leukaemia (arsenic content of 522–161 600 ppm) and in creams for whitening skin (mercury content of 5 700–126 000 ppm). Eight preparations contained synthetic drugs (e.g. benzodiazepines and tricyclic antidepressants in sedative preparations, cyproheptadine in a remedy to gain bodyweight, ibuprofen and dipyrone in herbal capsules used to treat rheumatism). 18 samples were contaminated with micro-organisms. 14 samples contained toxic substances of natural origin. Of the 247 examined preparations, 77 (i.e. over 30%) were disqualified due to high heavy metals content, bacterial contamination or presence of toxic organic substances. Conclusion: The study shows an urgent need to control the production, importing and selling of herbal preparations.
- Published
- 2002
23. Poor reproducibility of in-source collisional atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectra of toxicologically relevant drugs
- Author
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Rolf-Dieter Maier, Maciej J. Bogusz, Julie Romeril, Klaus D Krüger, Mark L. Miller, and Kenneth S. Webb
- Subjects
Narcotics ,Chemical ionization ,Reproducibility ,Morphine Derivatives ,Chromatography ,Atmospheric pressure ,Chemistry ,N-Methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine ,Organic Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,General Medicine ,Mass spectrometry ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Atmospheric Pressure ,Fragmentation (mass spectrometry) ,Mass spectrum ,Hallucinogens ,Round robin test - Abstract
The purpose of the study was to examine the intra- and interlaboratory reproducibility of mass spectra obtained with liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry (LC--API-MS) both in electrospray (ESI) and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) modes. Toxicologically relevant drugs of different polarity were selected as test substances: morphine-6-glucuronide, 6-monoacetylmorphine, codeine, lysergic acid diethylamide, methylenedioxymethamphetamine. The study was performed in two laboratories using identical instruments and in one using a slightly different instrument. Basic instrument settings and mobile phase were identical in all laboratories. Mass spectra of drugs were taken at four collision energy voltages and using mobile phase of different composition (four concentration levels of acetonitrile and of ammonium formate buffer). The experiments demonstrated that mass spectra of given drugs, obtained in identical conditions with identical instruments, may show very different degrees of fragmentation. Mass spectra obtained with different instruments differed profoundly not only in the degree of fragmentation, but also different fragments and adducts were observed. Short-term intralaboratory reproducibility of mass spectra was satisfactory. On the other hand, the long-term experiments showed different degrees of fragmentation of APCI-generated mass spectra at nominally identical fragmentation energy. The changes in the composition of the mobile phase (concentration of organic modifier or buffer molarity) did not affect the reproducibility of fragmentation to any relevant degree. The study showed that the interlaboratory exchange and use of mass spectrum library, generated by single-quadrupole (LC--API-MS instruments, is hardly feasible at the moment, even under very carefully standardized conditions.
- Published
- 2000
24. Editor's preface
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Chapter 1 Opiate agonists
- Author
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Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Chemical ionization ,Chromatography ,Opioid ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Chemistry ,medicine ,Selected ion monitoring ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Gas chromatography ,Opiate ,Mass spectrometry ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Publisher Summary In this chapter, the use of separation methods for isolation, identification and quantitative analysis of natural and synthetic opiates is being discussed. The term “opiate” refers specifically to the products derived from the opium poppy. The detection and quantitative analysis of defined opiates may be performed by gas or liquid chromatography, both separation methods being coupled to a mass spectrometer in selected ion monitoring mode, using electron impact or chemical ionization. Other detection modes used with gas chromatography (nitrogen-selective or electron capture detection) or with liquid chromatography (diode-array detection, electrochemical or fluorimetric detection) are still being, and continues to be, successfully used for dedicated purposes in opiate analysis. To the advantages of these techniques belong lower cost and sometimes very high sensitivity. Because of their lower selectivity, these methods are particularly valuable for analysis of less complicated matrices, like illicit drug specimens or pharmaceutical preparations. It also focuses on morphine derivatives and synthetic or semi-synthetic opiates, showing agonistic action at opioid receptors OP1 (δ), OP2 (κ) or OP3 (μ). This chapter discusses drugs of particular forensic significance and focuses upon forensic applications, reported over the past decade and devoted mainly to biological samples.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Hyphenated liquid chromatographic techniques in forensic toxicology
- Author
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Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Electrospray ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Forensic toxicology ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,General Chemistry ,Forensic Medicine ,Mass spectrometry ,Toxicology ,Diode array ,Mass Spectrometry ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Biological fluids ,Kovats retention index ,Humans ,Ionization mass spectrometry ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
The prerequisite of applicability of hyphenated methods in forensic analysis is the achievement of a stage of "final maturity". In the field of liquid chromatography, HPLC coupled with diode array detection (DAD) seems to fulfill this criterion, whilst the combination with atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry (HPLC-API-MS) is still in a development stage. HPLC-DAD is broadly used as identification tool in forensic and in emergency toxicology. Two main approaches were observed; development of retention index scales for intra-laboratory exchange of data and establishing of databases only for intra-laboratory use. Using these approaches, several databases were established for toxicological relevant substances (illicit and therapeutic drugs and their metabolites, environmental poisons etc.) in biological fluids. Also, complete HPLC-DAD identification systems are commercially available. Further possibility of progress depends on the on-line combination ("triple hyphenation") with other detection methods, preferably API-MS. HPLC-API-MS, both in electrospray (ESI) and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) options, underwent dramatic development in the last decade and is reaching its final shape. The method was broadly applied for various groups of toxicologically relevant substances, a lot of them unaccessible for other techniques, including GC-MS. Particularly important was application of HPLC-API-MS for detection and quantitation of active, polar metabolites of various drugs and for analysis of macromolecules. APCI seems to be more useful for analysis of less polar compounds, whereas ESI is particularly valuable for determination of polar, large molecules (e.g., toxic peptides, polar metabolites etc.) Up to now, HPLC-API-MS has been mainly applied for dedicated analyses, but the introduction of APCI or ESI in systematic toxicological screening may be expected in the near future.
- Published
- 1999
27. Forensic Science
- Author
-
Maciej J Bogusz and Maciej J Bogusz
- Subjects
- Forensic toxicology--Handbooks, manuals, etc, Chemistry, Forensic--Handbooks, manuals, etc
- Abstract
Forensic Science, Second Edition presents the applications of separation methods, manly chromatography, in forensic practice. The first part, devoted to forensic toxicology, contains reviews on forensic relevant groups of compounds, like: Opiate agonists, cocaine, amphetamines, hallucinogens, cannabinoids, sedatives and hypnotics, antidepressive and antipsychotic drugs, analgesics, antidiabetics, muscle relaxants, and mushroom toxins.In these parts, the preliminary immunochemical tests were also included, together with separation methods. Screening procedures used in forensic toxicology were presented in separate chapters on forensic screening with GC, GC-MS, HPLC, LC-MS, CE, and LC-ICP-MS. In the part on actual and emerging problems of forensic toxicology, following chapters were included: Analytical markers of alcohol abuse, toxicological aspects of herbal remedies, drugs and driving, analysis in alternative matrices, doping analysis, pharmacogenomics in forensic toxicology, and quality assurance. The second part presents application of separation methods in forensic chemistry, and comprises chapters on: Explosives, chemical warfare agents, arson analysis, and writing media. Third part on forensic identification contains chapter on forensic genetics.All chapters are written up-to-date and present specific information up to 2006. The authors of each chapter are known not only from their scientific activity, but are also reputed experts, proven in everyday forensic casework. - Wide spectrum of topics presented - Up-to-date presentation of topics - Data are presented in comparative mode - Special stress put on screening procedures
- Published
- 2008
28. Determination of common drugs of abuse in body fluids using one isolation procedure and liquid chromatography--atmospheric-pressure chemical-ionization mass spectromery
- Author
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Maciej J. Bogusz, Rolf-Dieter Maier, Ulrike Kohls, and Klaus-Dieter Krüger
- Subjects
Narcotics ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Dihydromorphine ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,In Vitro Techniques ,Toxicology ,Mass spectrometry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cocaine ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Selected ion monitoring ,Solid phase extraction ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Immunoassay ,Chemical ionization ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Illicit Drugs ,Reproducibility of Results ,Dihydrocodeine ,Body Fluids ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Lysergic Acid Diethylamide ,Benzoylecgonine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A method for determining opiate agonists (morphine, morphine-3-glucuronide, morphine-6-glucuronide, 6-monoacetylmorphine, codeine, codeine-6-glucuronide, dihydrocodeine, dihydromorphine, buprenorphine, methadone, tramadol, and ibogaine), cocaine and its metabolites (benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester) and lysergic acid diethylamide in serum, blood, urine and other biological matrices is presented. Aliquots (0.5-1.5 mL) of biological fluids were spiked with appropriate deuterated internal standards and extracted using a common solid-phase extraction method (C18 cartridges). The extracts were subjected to liquid chromatographic-atmospheric-pressure chemical-ionization mass spectrometric examination using selected ion monitoring procedures. These procedures were developed after analysis of full-scan mass spectra of examined compounds. The extraction method appeared very universal; the recoveries were high for almost all drugs and the extracts were very clean. The procedure was applied for routine forensic casework.
- Published
- 1998
29. Honey with Psilocybe mushrooms: a revival of a very old preparation on the drug market?
- Author
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Achim Th. Schafer, Rolf-Dieter Maier, Manfred Erkens, and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Hplc analysis ,Mushroom ,Chromatography ,Psilocybe ,biology ,Psilocybe cubensis ,Chemistry ,Food Contamination ,Psilocybine ,Honey ,biology.organism_classification ,Diode array ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Drug market ,Psilocybin ,Stropharia cubensis ,Horticulture ,Hallucinogens ,Drug and Narcotic Control ,Humans ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Netherlands - Abstract
In 1996 samples of suspicious honey preparations were confiscated at the Dutch-German border. The labels on the 50 ml jars indicated that the honey contained Stropharia cubensis (better known as Psilocybe cubensis). The jars were filled with honey with a ca. 1 cm layer of fine particles on the top. The particles were collected and subjected to microscopic and chemical analysis. By microscopy mushroom tissue (plectenchym) and spores typical for the genus Psilocybe were identified in all samples. The HPLC analysis with atmospheric pressure mass spectrometry and diode array detection revealed psilocine but psilocybine was not found. The quantitative analysis was very difficult due to the matrix problems. A search showed that the honey with Psilocybe can be purchased in Dutch coffee shops without any limitations although psilocine and psilocybine belong to listed substances according to Dutch law.
- Published
- 1998
30. Large amounts of drugs may considerably influence the peak areas of their coinjected deuterated analogues measured with APCI-LC-MS
- Author
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Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Morphine Derivatives ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Morphine ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Morphine derivatives ,Amphetamines ,Chromatography liquid ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Reference Standards ,Toxicology ,Mass spectrometry ,Deuterium ,Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Cocaine ,Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Reference standards ,Chromatography, Liquid - Published
- 1997
31. Determination of phenylisothiocyanate derivatives of amphetamine and its analogues in biological fluids by HPLC-APCI-MS or DAD
- Author
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Maria Kała, Maciej J. Bogusz, and Rolf-Dieter Maier
- Subjects
Collision-induced dissociation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Toxicology ,Mass spectrometry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Blood serum ,Isothiocyanates ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Selected ion monitoring ,Ephedrine ,Sympathomimetics ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Chemical ionization ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Amphetamines ,Forensic Medicine ,Body Fluids ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Thiocyanates ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Amphetamine (A), methamphetamine (MA), methylene dioxyamphetamine (MDA), methylenedioxyethylamphelamine (MDE), and methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), as well as eight other sympathomimetic amines (benzyl-1-phenylethylamine, ephedrine, fenfluramine, norfenfluramine, phentermine, phenylethylamine, phenylpropanolamine, and propylhexedrine), were extracted from serum or urine with ether, derivatized with phenylisothiocyanate, and subjected to high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) examination in isocratic mode. Two detection arts were applied: atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) mass spectrometry (MS) and UV-spectrometry as diode array detection (DAD) or single wavelength at 250 nm. The derivatives were well-separated and showed good chromatographic behavior. Full-scan mass spectra of drugs examined by means of APCI with collision induced dissociation (APCID) contained protonated molecular ions (M+H)+ and fragments typical for particular drugs. APCID-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) appeared very selective for differentiation of all drugs involved. The quantitation with APCID was performed using selected ion monitoring (SIM) of (M+H)+ ions and selected fragments of drugs involved and their deuterated analogues. The limits of detection ranged from 0.001 mg/L (MA, MDMA, and MDE) to 0.005 mg/L (A and MDA). In HPLC-DAD, the spectra of MDMA and MDE were practically identical with maxima of 236-240 nm. Other amphetamines showed slightly different spectra with maxima of 245-250 nm. The limits of detection in UV detection amounted to 0.01-0.03 mg/L (single wavelength detector at 250 nm) or 0.05-0.1 mg/L (DAD).
- Published
- 1997
32. Applicability of various brands of mixed-phase extraction columns for opiate extraction from blood and serum
- Author
-
U. Kohls, Maciej J. Bogusz, Rolf-Dieter Maier, and K.-H. Schiwy-Bochat
- Subjects
Morphine Derivatives ,Chromatography ,Morphine ,Chemistry ,Codeine ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Analytical chemistry ,Plasticizer ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Chemistry ,Forensic Medicine ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Chemistry Techniques, Analytical ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analgesics, Opioid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cartridge ,Humans ,Ion trap ,Particle size ,Solid phase extraction ,6-Monoacetylmorphine ,Particle Size ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
Four commercially available types of mixed-phase solid-phase extraction (SPE) columns (Bond Elut Certify, Isolute Confirm HCX, Chromabond Drug and Bakerbond Narc-2) were examined in order to compare the extraction efficiencies and chromatographic purity of extracts. The absolute recovery of morphine, 6-monoacetylmorphine and codeine was examined in blood and serum (ten samples each at two concentration levels), using SPE columns of the same batch. GC-MS (ion trap) and HPLC with amperometric detection were used for quantitation. A distinct variability in extraction recovery was observed among the same batches of all brands of SPE columns. All extracts were chromatographically pure and no interfering peaks were observed, neither in GC-MS nor in HPLC examinations, but in some extracts large peaks of plasticizers were identified. The measurements of flow velocities of the same samples of blood or serum through the SPE columns of the same batch showed very large variability of random charactere. The morphometric analysis of particles was performed for two batches of each sort of SPE columns by means of an image analysing system. Symmetrical distribution of particle size was observed only in Chromabond MN Drug packing, while in other cartridges large fractions of fine particles and nonhomogenous distribution were found. Only in one case the morphometric findings were pretty concordant with the data available from the manufacturer; in two cases, observed data varied considerably from the expected, and in one case no information was available at all. The study showed generally that there was room for improvement in the quality of mixed-phase SPE columns.
- Published
- 1996
33. Identification power of a standardized HPLC-DAD system for systematic toxicological analysis
- Author
-
Rolf Dieter Maier and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Absorption (pharmacology) ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chromatography, Gas ,Databases, Factual ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Analytical chemistry ,medicine.disease_cause ,Toxicology ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Identification (information) ,Ultraviolet visible spectroscopy ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Kovats retention index ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Gas chromatography ,Chromatography, Thin Layer ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Ultraviolet ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
High-performance liquid chromatography with photodiode-array detection (HPLC-DAD) provides two identification parameters: retention and UV spectral data. The identification power of these two parameters, expressed in standardized form (retention index and absorption maximum with the highest wavelength), is calculated using two approaches: discriminating power (DP) and mean list length (ML/). Our own HPLC database, which comprises data for more than 370 substances, is used as the basis of calculations. The identification power of both parameters applied separately is low but increases substantially when the combination of retention and spectral data is applied. Additionally, the DP and MLL values obtained for 56 acidic or neutral and 76 basic drugs examined by means of HPLC-DAD and other analytical methods (thin-layer chromatography, gas chromatography (GC), and ultraviolet (UV) detection) are compared. The on-line combination of HPLC retention index values and UV spectra, registered by means of DAD, creates an identification system in which the identification potential is slightly lower than the off-line combination of capillary GC and UV spectroscopy.
- Published
- 1995
34. Chapter 5 Application of nitroalkanes and secondary retention index standards for the identification of drugs
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Detection limit ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chromatography ,chemistry ,Kovats retention index ,Separation potential ,Organic chemistry ,Amine gas treating ,Methanol ,Acetonitrile ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Thin-layer chromatography - Abstract
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses applications of nitroalkanes and secondary retention index standards for the identification of drugs. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) offers some specific qualities that assure its place among other chromatographic methods relevant to toxicological screening analysis and make it a method of choice for the analysis of conjugated drug metabolites. The separation potential of HPLC is much higher and the detection limits much lower than those of less sophisticated thin layer chromatography (TLC). Moreover, HPLC may be applied to non-volatile, thermolabile, and highly polar substances. Reversed-phase column packings have been more frequently applied for toxicological screening than straight phase silica. Most often, octadecyl- or octyl-silica is used as the column packing and a mixture of methanol or acetonitrile with an acidic buffer, containing an amine modifier, as the mobile phase. The prerequisite for the efficient use of any retention index scale for compound identification is the robustness of the individual retention index (RI)-values of the compounds stored in a given database.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic database of retention indices and UV spectra of toxicologically relevant substances and its interlaboratory use
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz and Manfred Erkens
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Chemical compound ,Databases, Factual ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Reversed-phase chromatography ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Uv spectra ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Phase (matter) ,Kovats retention index ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Spectral data ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
An HPLC identification system based on a 1-nitroalkane retention index scale and secondary retention index standards is described. The retention index values and spectral data for 383 toxicologically relevant compounds (therapeutic and illicit drugs, environmental toxins and endogenous compounds) are given. The retention data may be directly applied in any laboratory using any reversed-phase, base-deactivated column, provided that the standardized procedure is observed.
- Published
- 1994
36. Leserbrief zu dem Artikel von U.K. Lindner und V. Oehm: Die Magie des Impact Factors - Enttarnung eines Phänomens. Rechtsmedizin 7:35-36, 1997
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Forensic psychiatry ,Philosophy ,medicine ,Humanities ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Stellungnahme zur Studie 'Cannabis im Straßenverkehr'
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz, Rolf-Dieter Maier, H. Althoff, and Manfred Erkens
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Forensic psychiatry ,medicine ,Cannabis ,biology.organism_classification ,Psychology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
Der von Herrn Prof. Dr. Th. Daldrup in seiner Studie „Cannabis im Strasenverkehr” vorgestellte Cannabis-Influence-Factor (CIF) als Bewertungskriterium einer Fahruntuchtigkeit last aus pharmakokinetischer, methodologischer und analytischer Sicht noch viele Fragen offen. Die generelle Anwendbarkeit in foro im Sinne eines „Grenzwertes” ist fraglich. Zur Beurteilung einer cannabisbedingten absoluten Verkehrsuntuchtigkeit bedarf es weiterer uberregionaler Forschung.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Postmortem distribution pattern of morphine and morphine glucuronides in heroin overdose
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Heroin poisoning ,business.industry ,INT ,Drug overdose ,medicine.disease ,Postmortem Changes ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Distribution pattern ,medicine ,Morphine ,Heroin overdose ,Tissue distribution ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Traditional Chinese Medicines: Molecular Structures, Natural Sources and Applications, 1999Traditional Chinese Medicines: Molecular Structures, Natural Sources and Applications, 1999. Compiled by by X. Yan, J. Zhou and G. Xie. Edited by G.W.A. Milne. Ashgate Publishing Co., 39 Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxford, UK. Price: £195.00. ISBN: 0-566-08210-1
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
business.industry ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,Biochemical engineering ,business ,Natural (archaeology) - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. High-performance liquid chromatographic determination of morphine, morphine-3-glucuronide, morphine-6-glucuronide and codeine in biological samples using multi-wavelength forward optical detection: a reply
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Morphine Derivatives ,Optics and Photonics ,Chromatography ,Morphine ,Codeine ,Chemistry ,Alkaloid ,Infant ,Multi wavelength ,General Chemistry ,Morphine-6-glucuronide ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Humans ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,medicine.drug ,Morphine-3-glucuronide - Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. 060 Supercritical fluid extraction of biological materials
- Author
-
B. Wenclawiak, A. Hoffmann, and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Chemistry ,business.industry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Supercritical fluid extraction ,Process engineering ,business ,Biochemistry ,Biological materials ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Internally Concealed Cocaine: Analytical and Diagnostic Aspects
- Author
-
Manfred Erkens, Rainer Hofmann, Rolf-Dieter Maier, H. Althoff, and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Saliva ,Screening test ,Injury control ,Accident prevention ,business.industry ,Poison control ,Physiology ,Urine ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Surgery ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Genetics ,Benzoylecgonine ,medicine ,Cocaine hydrochloride ,business - Abstract
Thirty persons arrested at Frankfurt airport for smug- gling internally concealed cocaine in 1993/1994 were investigated. An X-ray examination (in all 30 cases), immunochemical examina- tion of urine (in 27 cases) and of saliva (in 20 cases) was performed in parallel. An X-ray examination gave positive results in all exam- ined persons. EMIT | cocaine metabolite assay (cut off 300 ng benzoylecgonine (BE)/mL) was positive in eight urine samples. After reducing the cut off to 150 ng BE/mL urine, eleven samples were classified as positive. The results were conf'mned by means of chromatographic determinations. These findings showed limited role of immunological examination of urine as a screening test in suspected smuggling of internally concealed drugs. All saliva samples showed negative immunochemical results. The number of concealed containers ranged from 44 to 135 per person. The amount of cocaine hydrochloride found in particular cases ranged from 242 to 1050 g net weight, divided into containers weighing from 5.7 to 13.8 g. Drug packages were obviously machine-made. The packages smuggled by a particular person were uniform. However, a distinct interpersonal variability in drug pack- ages was observed, in regard to the number of protective layers (4-7), size, weight, and cocaine purity. This may be helpful for the identification of production site. The leaching of cocaine from selected containers was investigated in a stirring bath and was independent of the conditions applied.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Concerning Blood Cannabinoids and the Effect of Residual THCCOOH on Calculated Exposure Time
- Author
-
Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Analytical chemistry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Toxicology ,Residual ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Forensic Science
- Author
-
Maciej J Bogusz and Maciej J Bogusz
- Subjects
- Chemistry, Forensic--Handbooks, manuals, etc, Forensic toxicology--Handbooks, manuals, etc
- Abstract
Forensic Science
- Published
- 2000
45. APPLICABILITY OF CAPILLARY GAS-CHROMATOGRAPHY TO SYSTEMATIC TOXICOLOGICAL ANALYSIS - OCCURRENCE OF CONCENTRATION-DEPENDENT RETENTION BEHAVIOR
- Author
-
Jaap Wijsbeek, J.P. Franke, Maciej J. Bogusz, Ra Dezeeuw, and Nanomedicine & Drug Targeting
- Subjects
Chromatography, Gas ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Chromatography ,Chemical Phenomena ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Analytical chemistry ,Concentration effect ,Toxicology ,Fused silica capillary ,Analyse qualitative ,Capillary gas chromatography ,Analytical Chemistry ,Concentration dependent ,Qualitative analysis ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Environmental Chemistry ,Gas chromatography ,Volume concentration - Abstract
The retention behavior for a selection of acidic, neutral, and basic drugs was examined on four fused silica capillary columns in a splitless injection mode. Mixtures of n-alkanes and diisopropylamino-alkanes were also analyzed. The concentrations used ranged from 0.25-1000 ng/microL and injection volumes were either 2 or 4 microL. This corresponded to quantities of 1-4000 ng injected on the column. All substances showed concentration-dependent behavior: after being nearly constant or showing a decrease at low concentrations, retention times markedly increased when concentrations exceeded about 100 ng/microL (400 ng injected). At very high concentrations, peak splitting occurred. In the more pronounced cases, the differences caused by this concentration effect could reach values of over 100 retention-index units.
- Published
- 1983
46. Multicenter Evaluation of Ultrafiltration, Dialysis, and Thermal Coagulation as Sample Pretreatment Methods for the Colorimetric Determination of Paraquat in Blood and Tissues
- Author
-
Jp Franke, Jaap Wijsbeek, M. Klys, R.A. de Zeeuw, and Maciej J. Bogusz
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Chromatography ,Paraquat ,chemistry ,Genetics ,Ultrafiltration ,Thermal coagulation ,Pretreatment method ,Dialysis (biochemistry) ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
Three methods of sample pretreatment for the rapid colorimetric determination of paraquat were compared: ultrafiltration, dialysis, and thermal coagulation. Spiked autopsy blood and tissue samples were examined in parallel in Groningen and Krakow and some samples were interchanged. All three methods gave recoveries between 87 to 102%; accuracy at the 20-mg/L level was within 10% of the target value and coefficients of variation in the 10 to 60-mg/L range were between 3 to 15%. Determinations in blood and liver in a fatal case of Gramoxone® poisoning showed excellent agreement. Because of its reliability, speed, and simplicity, ultrafiltration is the method of choice.
- Published
- 1986
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