Importance of enhanced mass resolution in removing interferences when measuring volatile organic compounds in human blood by using purge-and-trap gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
- Vol. 3 (8) , 831-841
- https://doi.org/10.1016/1044-0305(92)80006-7
Abstract
The number of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that can be purged from human blood is so great that they cannot be separated completely by capillary gas chromatography. As a result, the single-mass chromatograms used for quantitating the target compounds by mass spectrometry have many interferences at nominal (integer) mass resolution of a quadrupole mass spectrometer. The results of these interferences range from small errors in quantitation to completely erroneous results for the target VOCs. By using a magnetic sector mass spectrometer, these interferences at nominal mass can be removed at higher resolution by lowering the ion chromatogram windows around the masses of interest. At 3000 resolution (10% valley definition), unique single-ion chromatograms can be made for the quantitation ions of the target VOCs. Full-scan mass data are required to allow the identification of unknown compounds purged from the blood. By using isotope-dilution mass spectrometry, most target VOCs can be detected in the low parts per trillion range for a 10-mL quantity of blood from which the VOCs have been removed by a purge-and-trap method.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development and evaluation of a procedure for determining volatile organics in waterEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1988
- Controlling Indoor Air PollutionScientific American, 1988
- Human exposure to volatile organic compounds in household tap water: the indoor inhalation pathwayEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1987
- The TEAM Study: Personal exposures to toxic substances in air, drinking water, and breath of 400 residents of New Jersey, North Carolina, and North DakotaEnvironmental Research, 1987
- Comparison of indoor and outdoor residential levels of volatile organic chemicals in five U.S. geographical areasEnvironment International, 1986
- The environmental protection agency's research program on total human exposureEnvironment International, 1986
- Human reactions to low concentrations of volatile organic compoundsEnvironment International, 1986
- Inhalation exposure in the home to volatile organic contaminants of drinking waterScience of The Total Environment, 1985
- Toluene concentrations in the blood and alveolar air of workers during the workshift and the morning after.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1985
- Genotoxicity of organic chemicals frequently found in the air of mobile homesToxicology Letters, 1985