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  • Rising above helium: A hydrogen carrier gas chromatography flame ionization detection (GC-FID) method for the simultaneous quantification of toxic alcohols and ethylene glycol in human plasma specimens.

Rising above helium: A hydrogen carrier gas chromatography flame ionization detection (GC-FID) method for the simultaneous quantification of toxic alcohols and ethylene glycol in human plasma specimens.

Clinical biochemistry (2019-08-20)
Joshua Buse, Jason L Robinson, Rosemary Shyne, Qingli Chi, Darlene Affleck, Donna Duce, Isolde Seiden-Long
ABSTRACT

Here we validate a GC, Flame Ionization Detection (GC-FID), liquid injection method using hydrogen as a carrier gas combining analysis of toxic volatile alcohols (VA): methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, acetone, as well as glycols, ethylene glycol (EG) and propylene glycol (PG), in a single method. 200ā€ÆĪ¼L of calibrator, QC, or patient specimen were deproteinized with 400ā€ÆĪ¼L of acetonitrile containing internal standards (10ā€Æmmol/Lā€ÆN-propyl alcohol for VA and 2.5ā€Æmmol/L 1,2-butanediol for glycols). GC-FID analysis using hydrogen carrier gas and nitrogen makeup gas utilized an Agilent 7890 system equipped with Agilent 7683 liquid autosampler on a 30ā€Æmā€ÆƗā€Æ530ā€ÆĪ¼m RTX-200 fused silica column. Method validation included repeatability, recovery, carryover, linearity, lower limit of quantification (LLOQ), accuracy, selectivity and measurement uncertainty. The 8.3ā€Æmin from injection to injection reduced time of analysis by 45% over a previously reported method using Helium carrier gas with no loss in resolution. Within-run and Between-run variability were ā‰¤1.4% and ā‰¤6.8% respectively. Recovery was 100% within a 95% confidence interval. Carryover was negligible for all but EG. LLOQ was <1ā€Æmmol/L for all analytes. The upper range of linearity was 120ā€Æmmol/L for methanol, ethanol and isopropanol, 100ā€Æmmol/L for acetone and 50ā€Æmmol/L for EG. Analytes demonstrated acceptable accuracy and measurement uncertainty using College of American Pathologists (CAP) criteria. Toluene can cause a false positive EG, while benzene, xylene and 1,3 butanediol can cause false negative EG. Converting from Helium to Hydrogen carrier gas benefits patient care through a reduction in turnaround time and provides a cost savings to the laboratory.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Ethylene glycol, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Diethylene glycol, ReagentPlusĀ®, 99%
Sigma-Aldrich
1,2-Butanediol, 98%
Sigma-Aldrich
Intralipid, 20%, emulsion
Sigma-Aldrich
1,2-Propanediol, ACS reagent, ≥99.5%