Abstract

Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology. While sensitive and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, current methods are time-consuming and too expensive for routine analysis. The aim of this study was therefore to design and validate a simple dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (DLLME) for the preparation of urine samples to be analysed for diazinon with high performance liquid chromatography with diode-array detector (HPLC-DAD) to establish diazinon exposure and poisoning. To do that, we first identified critical parameters (type and volume of extraction and disperser solvents, pH, surfactant, and salt concentrations) in preliminary experiments and then used central composite design to determine the best experimental conditions for DLLME-HPLC-DAD. For DLLME they were 800 µL of methanol (disperser solvent) and 310 µL of toluene (extraction solvent) injected to the urine sample rapidly via a syringe. The sample was injected into a HPLC-DAD (C18 column, 250×4.6 mm, 5 μm), and the mobile phase was a mixture of acetonitrile and buffer (63:37 v/v, pH 3.2; flow rate: 1 mL/ min). Standard calibration curves for diazinon were linear with the concentration range of 0.5–4 µg/mL, yielding a regression equation Y=0.254X+0.006 with a correlation coefficient of 0.993. The limit of detection and limit of quantification for diazinon were 0.15 µg/mL and 0.45 µg/mL, respectively. The proposed method was accurate, precise, sensitive, and linear over a wide range of diazinon concentrations in urine samples. This method can be employed for diazinon analysis in routine clinical and forensic toxicology settings.

Highlights

  • Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology

  • Diazinon (O,O-diethyl O-[4-methyl-6-(propan-2-yl) pyrimidin-2-yl] phosphorothioate) is one of the most common causes of occupational, clinical, and forensic organophosphate (OP) poisoning in the world [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. In biological samples it can be determined with several analytical methods for experimental, clinical, and forensic purposes [15,16,17,18], such as solid-phase extraction (SPE) followed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/ MS) in postmortem blood samples [15], high performance liquid chromatography with diode-array detector (HPLCDAD) in serum and urine of patients with acute poisoning [16], or liquid chromatography with tandem MS in gastric content and blood for forensic toxicology [18]

  • Corresponding author: Dr Kambiz Soltaninejad, Department of Forensic Toxicology, Legal Medicine Research Center, Legal Medicine Organization, Behesht Street, Tehran-1114795113, Iran E-mail: kamsoltaninejad@gmail.com. These methods are sensitive, and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, they are too time-consuming and expensive for routine analysis. This issue has called for the development of simple, fast, low-cost, user- and environment-friendly sample preparation methods such as liquid phase microextraction (LPME), which requires a small volume of a water-immiscible solvent [19]

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Summary

Introduction

Diazinon poisoning is an important issue in occupational, clinical, and forensic toxicology. In biological samples it can be determined with several analytical methods for experimental, clinical, and forensic purposes [15,16,17,18], such as solid-phase extraction (SPE) followed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/ MS) in postmortem blood samples [15], high performance liquid chromatography with diode-array detector (HPLCDAD) in serum and urine of patients with acute poisoning [16], or liquid chromatography with tandem MS in gastric content and blood for forensic toxicology [18] These methods are sensitive, and specific enough to analyse diazinon in biological samples, they are too time-consuming and expensive for routine analysis. Simple, inexpensive, efficient, and requires minimal (microlitre) volumes of low- and high-density solvents for the extraction of many water-based samples [20, 21]

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