Abstract

Ingested drugs can be taken up into nails and hairs from the bloodstream and these drugs can be stably retained over several months or more. Free edges of nails can often be used as a specimen to prove drug intake. However, the mechanism of drug uptake into the nails is unclear. Although it is presumed that there are horizontal uptake routes at the nail root and vertical uptake routes at the nail bed against the direction of growth, three-dimensional distribution analysis is required to verify this phenomenon. Herein, we first developed a method to measure the three-dimensional distribution of drugs in the nails using the combination of micro-segmentation of nails (0.2 × 1.5 × 0.06 mm size) and highly sensitive quantification of drugs by LC-MS/MS. Carbinoxamine was administered as a model compound to a subject in a single dose, and then the free edges of big toenails were collected every several weeks over a year. The three-dimensional distribution of carbinoxamine in each free edge was visualized and arranged along the collection period. Carbinoxamine was localized in the lower layer during the early collection period (up to 78 days after drug ingestion) and in the upper and middle layers later (134 days or later). The changes in the drug distribution in the nails along the collection period implied that two-way drug uptake takes place in the whole nail through both the nail bed and the nail root simultaneously. The developed analytical method could be useful to elucidate the mechanism of drug uptake into the nails.

Full Text
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