Publication | Closed Access
Biomedical Applications of Selected Ion Monitoring
54
Citations
83
References
1975
Year
EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringChemistryBiosensorsIon MonitoringEnvironmental ChemistryAnalytical InstrumentationGas ChromatographyEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryBioanalysisAnalytical ChemistryWidespread ApplicationCation SensingChromatographyMagnetic Sector InstrumentsChemical MeasurementSensor ApplicationsBioinstrumentationSelected Ion MonitoringPharmacologyElectrophysiologyMedicineDrug Analysis
Abstract In 1961 Henneberg [1] employed selected ion monitoring (SIM) to study hydrocarbons eluting from a gas chromatographic column, and in 1966 the first biological application was reported by Sweeley, Elliott, Fries, and Ryhage [2]. Since these efforts and the early impetus given by Hammar, Holmstedt, and co-workers [3–6], SIM has found widespread application in biological, medicinal, and environmental research. Recent review articles have described ion monitoring work with magnetic sector instruments [7,8,8a,8b], quadrupole instruments [9], and time-of-flight instruments [19]. These articles provide comprehensive coverage of applications through 1972. This review emphasizes medicinal and biological applications through 1973 and attempts to evaluate current methods and recent developments.
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