Publication | Closed Access
Determination of 60 elements in whole blood by sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry
156
Citations
27
References
2000
Year
EngineeringWhole BloodSpectrochemical AnalysisEnvironmental ChemistryAnalytical InstrumentationMetalloid ContaminationBioanalysisPlasma Mass SpectrometryAvailable BloodAnalytical ChemistryClinical ChemistryInstrumentationLaboratory MedicineElemental CharacterizationTrace ElementChromatographyRadiologyTrace MetalEcotoxicologySector FieldEnvironmental EngineeringDouble-focusing Icp-ms InstrumentMass SpectrometryMetal ToxicityEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
A method is described for the determination of 60 elements in whole blood, using a double-focusing ICP-MS instrument. Microwave-assisted digestion in low-volume PFA vessels resulted in 10-fold sample dilution. External calibration with matrix-matched standards was used for quantification. Different factors affecting detection limits are discussed. The performance of the method for the determination of environmentally relevant concentrations was evaluated using a whole blood reference material and intercomparison samples. Owing to high instrumental detection power and low preparation blanks, 57 elements could be detected in the bovine whole blood reference material (IAEA A-13). Trace element leaching from commercially available blood sampling tubes made of glass was shown to be a serious contamination factor. Concentrations obtained for three calf blood samples taken under `metal-free' conditions are presented.
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