The testing for drugs of abuse in hair is increasingly used to detect illicit substances. Laboratories have implemented various decontamination, or washing, procedures in order to eliminate concerns regarding potential contamination of the hair with drug from the environment. However, the effect of these decontamination procedures on drug incorporated into the hair shaft via systemic exposure is unknown. This study evaluated the effect of four simple laboratory wash procedures on the quantitative measurement of cocaine and its metabolites in hair from rats administered cocaine by intraperitoneal injection. Washes included (1) methanol only; (2) 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 6.0; (3) 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 8.0; and (4) isopropanol and phosphate buffer, pH 5.5. Cocaine and its major metabolites, benzoylecgonine, norcocaine, ecgonine methyl ester, and cocaethylene, were analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to atmospheric pressure electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. All four washes resulted in significant differences from unwashed hair controls (p < or = 0.05) for some or all of the detectable analytes. Because different wash procedures lead to significant differences in the measured concentrations of analytes in hair known to contain drug, quantitative data must be interpreted cautiously based on the wash procedures employed.
A study has been made of the volatile constituents in the vapors collected from fecal pellets of wild rabbits,Oryctolagus cuniculus. Measurements of changes in the heart rates of adult male rabbits exposed to the effluent of a gas chromatographic capillary column were used to indicate the presence of compounds which may be of behavioral significance. Combined with the use of high-resolution columns in gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, this approach has implicated several classes of compounds, including volatile fatty acids and phenols, which in certain absolute or relative concentrations may be involved in the formation of signals of territorial importance.
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