Nine laboratories participated in an AOAC International/ International Dairy Federation collaborative study on a liquid chromatographic (LC) method for determination of iodine in milk. Liquid milk is passed through a 25 000 MW membrane filter to remove protein and insoluble material. Iodine (in the form of iodide) in the clear filtrate is separated by reversed-phase ion-pair LC and is detected electrochemically. Participants analyzed 2 commercial pasteurized whole milks and 5 nonfat dry milk powders in blind duplicate. Each sample was tested in duplicate on 2 days. Repeatability and reproducibility standard deviations (sr and SR, respectively) and repeatability and reproducibility relative standard deviations (RSDr and RSDR, respectively) for determinations of iodine in whole milk (mean recovery, 86.7%) were as follows: sr, 22 μg/L; SR, 22 μg/L; RSDr, 8.2%; and RSDR, 8.3%. For powdered milk (mean recovery, 91 %), the values were as follows: sr, 0.14 μg/g; SR, 0.22 μg/g; RSDr, 9.0%; and RSDR, 12.7%. The method was adopted first action by AOAC International.
Vitamin D2 or vitamin D3 is determined by liquid chromatography (LC) in milk and infant formula. Vitamin D is extracted from the saponified sample, passed through an amino-cyano LC cleanup column to remove major interferences, and quantitated using normal phase LC. Within-day precision is 4.5% relative standard deviation (RSD); the overall method RSD (reflecting technician-to-technician, day-today, and within-day variability) is 7.7%. Overspike recoveries averaged 97% for milk, 98% for milk-based infant formula, and 93% for soy-based infant formula. The performance of the method is compared with that of the official AOAC vitamin D method (rat bioassay). The method is applicable to the determination of vitamin D in milk and in the major milk- and soy-based infant formulas available in the United States. The method can quantitate (but not distinguish) either vitamin D2 or vitamin D3. The method is applicable to milk and infant formula samples containing between 100 and 1500 IU vitamin D/L. Sample throughput is between 4 and 8 replicates per da
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