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Molecularly imprinted solid‐phase extraction of cephalexin from water‐based matrices
Author(s) -
Beltran Antoni,
Fontanals Núria,
Marcé Rosa M.,
Cormack Peter A. G.,
Borrull Francesc
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of separation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.72
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1615-9314
pISSN - 1615-9306
DOI - 10.1002/jssc.200900268
Subject(s) - molecularly imprinted polymer , solid phase extraction , chromatography , sorbent , chemistry , extraction (chemistry) , molecular imprinting , tandem mass spectrometry , selectivity , adsorption , mass spectrometry , organic chemistry , catalysis
In the present paper, we describe the synthesis of a cephalexin (CFX) molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP), the direct application of the MIP to SPE for the determination of CFX (which is a β‐lactam antibiotic) in human urine and the use of the MIP in a tandem SPE system to determine CFX in river water. The molecularly imprinted polymers (MIP) showed cross‐selectivity for amoxicillin (AMX; also a β‐lactam antibiotic). This allowed both CFX and AMX to be quantified in acidified human urine, with recoveries of 78 and 60% for CFX and AMX, respectively, when the urine samples were spiked with CFX and AMX at 4 mg/L. These analyses were facile because the molecularly imprinted solid‐phase extraction (MISPE) extracts were clear compared to the nonpurified samples. In order to increase the sample volume for river water analyses, a tandem SPE system incorporating a commercially available sorbent was implemented. With this set‐up, CFX was determined with recoveries in excess of 50% when 200 mL of acidified river water samples spiked at 10 μg/L with CFX were percolated through the tandem system.