Practical Screening Procedure for Sulfathiazole in Honey
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL
- Vol. 69 (1) , 72-74
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jaoac/69.1.72
Abstract
A simple, inexpensive procedure is described for rapidly screening small samples of honey for sulfathiazole (ST), a drug formerly used but not approved in the United States for the prophylactic treatment of American foulbrood disease of bees. The method uses 2 plastic tubes arranged in tandem. The upper tube contains a bed of alumina, which removes some interfering pigments. The lower tube contains a very small bed of anion exchange resin in the HSO4- form, which traps the ST. The drug is eventually eluted and detected using the Bratton-Marshall diazotization-coupling reagents. Honey containing 0.1 ppm ST can be readily detected. An optional dye concentration step permits the detection of as little as 25 ppb ST.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reverse Phase Liquid Chromatographic Determination of Sulfathiazole Residues in HoneyJournal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL, 1983
- Determination of Sulfathiazole in Honey from Medicated Honey Bee Colonies by High-Performance Liquid Chromatography on a Cyano-Amino Polar Phase 1Environmental Entomology, 1982
- Rapid Screening Test for Sulfamethazine in Swine FeedsJournal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL, 1982
- Determination of Sulphonamide Residues in Honeys by High-Pressure Liquid ChromatographyJournal of Apicultural Research, 1981