Abstract

A series of potent heterocyclic amines that are mutagenic and carcinogenic have been discovered that are formed in some heated foods, most notably, meats derived from muscle. Determining the heterocyclic amine content in foods and food products is required for toxicological research, industry quality control, and possibly in the future, regulatory control. The contents of food needs to be determined using reliable analytical techniques. Since heterocyclic amines are present in foods at ng/g levels, a variety of liquid-liquid or solid-phase purification techniques are required, followed by gas or high-performance liquid chromatography. Peak detection has been successful using UV, fluorescence, and mass spectrometric detection, and biological activity using the Ames/ Salmonella test. The low levels present require that chromatographic efficiency, and both detector sensitivity and selectivity be optimized. The cartridge solid-phase extraction and high-performance liquid chromatography method have been used to measure the known food-derived heterocyclic amines for several types of food, and to the authors knowledge, this is the only method undergoing intralaboratory comparison and validation: Our analysis of the literature shows that chromatographic analysis of the heterocyclic amines by high-performance liquid chromatography or gas chromatography (with derivatization) is satisfactory for heterocyclic amine analysis in foods although the methods are just now being optimized for routine use. The biggest improvements in speed and accuracy will probably come from improved extraction methods as analysis of complex food samples for heterocyclic areines will always be a challenge.

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