Abstract

Traditional medicine mainly of herbal origin is widely used all around the world. Heavy metal contamination in such products is frequently reported. Accumulation of heavy metals in the human body leads to various health hazards. Thus, precise determination for such contaminants is required for safety assurance. Sample preparation is a significant step in spectroscopic analysis to achieve reliable and accurate results. Wet digestion methods are basically used for the dissolution of herbal product samples prior to elemental analysis. This study has been designed to evaluate the efficiency of three acid digestion methods using different solvents. Five samples were digested with three different acid digestion methods namely method A (a combination of nitric-perchloric acids HNO3–HClO4 in a ratio 2:1), method B (only nitric acid HNO3), and method C (a mixture of nitric-hydrochloric acids HNO3–HCl in a ratio 1:3), to recommend the most efficient digestion method that gains the highest analyte recovery. The analysis of arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), nickel (Ni), zinc (Zn), and iron (Fe) was conducted using various techniques of atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS). The statistical analysis revealed that method C which represented the combination of nitric-hydrochloric acids HNO3–HCl in a ratio 1:3 was the most efficient digestion method for herbal product samples as it had given a significant high recovery (p < 0.05) for all metals compared to method A and method B. Accuracy of the proposed method was evaluated by the analysis of standard reference material (SRM) 1515 Apple Leaves from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) which presented good recoveries for all metals ranging from 94.5 to 108 %. Method C provides highest recovery for all the analytes under investigation using AAS in herbal medicine samples.

Highlights

  • Traditional medicine mainly of herbal origin is widely used all around the world

  • The results obtained from all experiments indicated that method C which represented the mixture of nitric acid (HNO3)–hydrochloric acid (HCl) had given the highest analyte recovery for As, Cd, Pb, Ni, Zn, and Fe in Traditional medicine (TM) samples

  • The differences were found statistically significant with a p value

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional medicine mainly of herbal origin is widely used all around the world. Heavy metal contamination in such products is frequently reported. Wet digestion methods are basically used for the dissolution of herbal product samples prior to elemental analysis. Safety and quality of such products become a major concern (Igweze et al 2012) Inorganic contaminants such as heavy metals are often present in herbal medicine in various concentration levels (Saeed 2010; Hina et al 2011; Qing-hua et al 2001). Uddin et al Journal of Analytical Science and Technology (2016) 7:6 spectrometries (HGAAS) are mainly applied for elemental analysis in various samples Acid digestion methods are generally used for the dissolution of herbal product samples prior to elemental analysis (Duyusen and Görkem 2011). In a spectroscopic elemental analysis sample preparation, acid digestion is an important step of the entire analytical procedure. The analysis of heavy metals was conducted using various techniques of atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS)

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