Trace Analysis of Multiclass Antibiotics in Food Products by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry: Method Development.

2021
It is commonly known that the widespread use of antibiotics has led to their existence in food products as residues and ingestion of these food products may create a selection pressure on bacteria inhabiting the human body. In this study, an optimized method for the analysis of antibiotic residues in different food groups, including cereals, meat, eggs, milk, vegetables, and fruits, was developed using solvent extraction, solid-phase extraction cleanup, and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The limits of detection (LODs) were achieved as 0.007-1.1, 0.008-0.46, 0.002-0.67, 0.007-0.63, 0.001-0.098, and 0.005-0.26 ng/g in ng/g in cereals, meat, eggs, milk, vegetables, and fruits, respectively. The overall average recoveries at three spiking levels of the 81 antibiotics (5, 25, and 50 ng/g dry weight) were 82 ± 26, 77 ± 26, 70 ± 34, 69 ± 31, 73 ± 29, and 62 ± 37% in cereals, meat, eggs, milk, vegetables, and fruits, respectively. The method was then applied to the analysis of the targets in the collected wheat flour, mutton, chicken egg, boxed milk, cabbage, and banana samples, with the total concentration of the antibiotics detected being 4.4, 2.3, 36, 5.5, 2.7, and 14 ng/g, respectively. This work suggests that the developed method provides a time- and cost-effective method to identify and quantify antibiotic residues in common food products.
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