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Published:
Journal of Analytical Toxicology,
ISSN 0146-4760,
Volume 24,
Number 7, October,
pp. 496-508
Here is where the title stuff goes
The
Disposition of Cocaine and Opiate Analytes in Hair and Fingernails of Humans Following
Cocaine and Codeine Administration
Jeri D.
Ropero-Miller
Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Campus Box 7580, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
27511
Bruce A. Goldberger
Department of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine, University of
Florida College of Medicine, P.O. Box 100275, Gainesville, Florida 32610
Edward J. Cone and Robert E. Joseph, Jr.
Intramural Research Program, National Institute of Drug Abuse, Baltimore, Maryland
21224
This study
investigated the disposition patterns of cocaine and opiates into hair and fingernail
specimens collected from 8 volunteers enrolled in a 10-week inpatient clinical
study. All subjects were African-American males with a confirmed drug use history.
Scalp hair and fingernail scrapings were collected weekly throughout the course
of the study. Head hair was collected from the posterior vertex region, and
fingernail scrapings were collected along the entire ventral surface of the
nail plate. The specimens were introduced to successive decontamination washes
including an isopropanol wash and three phosphate buffer washes. All decontamination
washes were collected and analyzed. All specimens were enzymatically digested
prior to being subjected to solid-phase extraction and derivatization. Analyses
were performed using electron impact gas chromatographymass spectrometry.
Analytes investigated included eight cocaine analytes and five codeine analytes.
The limit of quantitation for all analytes ranged from 0.1 to 0.5 ng/mg for
both matrices. Cocaine was present at the highest concentrations of any analyte
in both hair and nail. Benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester were the primary
metabolites in both matrices and were typically less than 15% of cocaine concentrations.
Codeine was the only opiate analyte identified in either hair or nail. Observed
drug disposition profiles were different for hair and nails. A significant dose-response
relationship was observed for hair specimens. The mean peak concentrations in
hair after low dosing were half the concentration observed after high-dose administration.
Generally, no clear relationship was evident between nail drug concentrations
and dose. Decontamination washes removed less than 20% of the total drug present
in hair, but removed most of the drug concentrations (60100%) in nail.
This investigation demonstrated that higher concentrations of drug were found
in the subjects hair than in their fingernails and that cocaine was found
in both matrices at a greater concentration than codeine. Although both hair
and nail have similar physical and chemical properties and may share common
mechanisms of drug incorporation, this clinical study suggests that there are
distinct differences in their disposition profiles.
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