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Published: Journal of Analytical Toxicology, Volume 20, Number 1, January/February 1996, pp. 1-12.
Incorporation of Isotopically Labeled Cocaine and Metabolites
into Human Hair: 1. DoseResponse Relationships
Gary L. Henderson, Martha R. Harkey, Chihong Zhou, Reese T. Jones and Peyton
Jacob, III
Deuterium-labeled cocaine (cocaine-d5) was administered intravenously and/or intranasally in doses of 0.64.2 mg/kg to 25 human volunteers under laboratory clinical conditions. Sequential blood samples were collected for up to 3 days, and hair samples were collected for up to 10 months. Samples were analyzed by gas chromatographymass spectrometry (GCMS) for cocaine-d5 and its major metabolite, benzoylecgonine-d5 (BZE-d5). The parent drug, cocaine-d5, was the predominant analyte in hair, whereas BZE-d5 was the major analyte in blood, especially at later time periods. The amount of cocaine-d5 incorporated into hair ranged from 0.1 to 5 ng/mg hair, whereas the amount of BZE-d5 was approximately one-sixth of that concentration. The threshold dose for detection was estimated to be 2535 mg of drug administered intravenously. A single dose could be detected for 26 months. Subjects receiving the same dose differed (from two to 12 times as much depending upon how it was measured) in the amount of cocaine-d5 incorporated into their hair. Non-Caucasians, in particular, incorporated more cocaine-d5 in hair than did Caucasians. Also, segmental analysis of the samples revealed considerable intersubject variability in the time drug first appeared in hair and the rate at which the drug moved along the hair shaft with time. These interindividual differences could not be explained by differences in plasma pharmacokinetics. Considered together, these results suggest that cocaine incorporation into hair may occur by way of multiple mechanismsby way of sweat and sebum, for exampleand at various times during the hair growth cycle. Thus, hair analysis using GCMS appears to be a very sensitive method for detecting cocaine ingestion. However, within the range of doses used in the present study, hair does not provide a particularly accurate record of either the amount, time, or duration of drug use.
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