Unregulated cacti from the genus Echinopsis are used recreationally as mescaline-containing alternatives to the outlawed peyote. Echinopsis-derived plant materials appear in a variety of nondescript forms, making rapid assessment of whether they are mescaline-containing materials or simply innocuous plant-derived food products, very challenging. Reported here is a DART-HRMS approach for the rapid detection of mescaline in whole plant material and a validated method for the quantification of mescaline in cactus tissue, using mescaline-d9 as the internal standard. Calibration curves exhibited R2 values of ≥0.995, and the method exhibited a LLOQ and a linear range of 1 ppm and 1–100 ppm, respectively. Application of the method to commercially available Echinopsis spp. yielded results consistent with previous studies performed by GC- and LC-MS, with mescaline levels of <2% dry weight in all cases. Therefore, DART-HRMS is a suitable technique for the rapid screening of mescaline and its subsequent quantification within complex plant-derived matrices.
CITATION STYLE
Longo, C. M., & Musah, R. A. (2020). An Efficient Ambient Ionization Mass Spectrometric Approach to Detection and Quantification of the Mescaline Content of Commonly Abused Cacti from the Echinopsis Genus. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 65(1), 61–66. https://doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.14134
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