Abstract

A method for the assay of acidic catecholamine metabolites in biological fluids using capillary gas chromatography—electron-capture negative-ion mass spectrometry is described. The method combines acetylation of phenolic hydroxy groups in buffered aqueous solution followed by pentafluorobenzyl ester formation and acetylation of aliphatic hydroxy groups under anhydrous conditions. The resulting per-O-acetyl carboxypentafluorobenzyl esters provided excellent negative-ion mass spectra with intense and diagnostic anions. The sensitivity of the analysis using electron-capture negative-ion mass spectrometry exceeds that using electron-impact mass spectrometry by two to three orders of magnitude. Analysis of acidic catecholamine metabolites in human lumbar cerebrospinal fluid and plasma were performed with good precision (σ rel < 5%) at the low nanomoles per litre level.

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