Detection of Tricyclic Antidepressants in Whole Blood by Headspace Solid-Phase Microextraction and Capillary Gas Chromatography

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Abstract

A simple method for the extraction of four tricyclic antidepressants from whole blood by headspace solid-phase microextraction (SPME) is presented. The whole blood samples contain four drugs (amitriptyline, chlorimipramine, imipramine, and trimipramine) and are heated at 100°C in a septum-capped vial in the presence of distilled water and NaOH solution; a polydimethylsiloxane-coated SPME fiber is exposed to the headspace of the vial to allow adsorption of the drugs before capillary gas chromatography (GC) with flame-ionization detection. The headspace SPME-GC produces intense peaks for each drug with very little background noise. Recoveries of the four drugs by the present method are 5.3-12.9%. The calibration curves for the drugs show linearity in the range of 31-1000 ng/0.5 ml. The detection limits of each drug are 16-25 ng/0.5 mL. Imipramine is detectable from rat blood 5 h after oral administration of imipramine (500 mg/kg body weight); the concentration is 1.44 ± 0.209 μg/mL.

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Lee, X. P., Kumazawa, T., Sato, K., & Suzuki, O. (1997). Detection of Tricyclic Antidepressants in Whole Blood by Headspace Solid-Phase Microextraction and Capillary Gas Chromatography. Journal of Chromatographic Science, 35(7), 302–308. https://doi.org/10.1093/chromsci/35.7.302

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