Simultaneous Determination of Ethylene Glycol and Glycolic Acid in Serum by Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
Author(s) -
William H. Porter,
Philip W. Rutter,
Hongyang Yao
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of analytical toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.161
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1945-2403
pISSN - 0146-4760
DOI - 10.1093/jat/23.7.591
Subject(s) - glycolic acid , chromatography , ethylene glycol , mass spectrometry , chemistry , gas chromatography , gas chromatography–mass spectrometry , organic chemistry , genetics , bacteria , biology , lactic acid
We describe a gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric (GC-MS) procedure for the simultaneous determination of ethylene glycol (EG) and its major toxic metabolite, glycolic acid (GA), in serum. In this method, serum (50 microL) is treated with 150 microL of glacial acetic acid/acetonitrile (1:10, v/v; contains internal standard, 1,3-propanediol, 15 mg/dL) to precipitate protein. After centrifugation, 10 microL of supernate is treated with 500 microL of 2,2-dimethoxypropane/dimethylformamide (80:20, v/v) to convert water to methanol, and the volume is then reduced to < 100 microL of dimethylformamide (but not to dryness). After formation of tertbutyldimethylsilyl derivatives, analysis is performed by capillary column GC-MS in selected ion mode. The method gives a linear response to 1000 mg/L each EG and GA (16.1 mmol/L and 13.2 mmol/L, respectively) and has a lower limit of detection and a lower limit of quantitation of 10 mg/L each EG and GA (0.16 mmol/L and 0.13 mmol/L, respectively). Total assay imprecision is CV < or = 6.4% (200 and 800 mg/L EG and GA [3.2 and 12.9 mmol/L EG; 2.6 and 10.5 mmol/L GA, respectively]). Absolute recovery from human serum was 91.1% for EG and 77.6% for GA. The procedure is free from any known interference. A complete analysis set (three calibrators, patient serum neat, patient serum diluted 1:5 (v/v), and two controls) may be completed in about 2 h. A preliminary result, based on a single calibrator and patient serum diluted 1:5 (v/v), is complete in about 1 h. The method has been used to aid the diagnosis and management in 34 cases of EG intoxication. Selected cases are briefly reviewed.
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