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Determination of methylmercury in fish and seafood using optimized digestion and derivatization followed by gas chromatography with atomic emission detection

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Kuballa, Thomas
  Author Leonhardt, Elena
  Author Schoeberl, Kerstin
  Author Lachenmeier, Dirk W (Chemisches und Veterinäruntersuchungsamt Karlsruhe)
JOURNAL:
  European food research and technology: Zeitschrift für Lebensmittel-Untersuchung und -Forschung. A, ??(??), ?? - ??.
YEAR: forthcoming
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): Mercury - Methylmercury compounds - Speciation - Gas chromatography - Atomic absorption spectrometry - Organomercury compounds - Fishes - Seafood - Food contamination
DISCIPLINE: Agricultural and Food Sciences
HTTP: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00217-008-0949-0
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-445-311 (Last edited on 2008/09/22 00:36:59 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Mercury is an environmental contaminant that appears in different chemical forms. Organic forms of mercury, such as methylmercury, can occur in marine organisms like fish and shellfish and are far more toxic than the inorganic form. It is therefore vital to have refined analytical methods for the different mercuric species in order to evaluate the potential risk for seafood consumers. The aim of our investigations was to develop a simple, robust and valid method for differentiation of the mercury species in marine organisms. Different alkaline and acidic digestion procedures were evaluated. The best performing methodology consisted of digestion of 0.5 g sample in methanolic potassium hydroxide solution. After derivatization with sodium tetraethylborate and extraction of the ethylated mercury species using n-hexane, a quantitative determination of the extract using gas chromatography, combined with atomic emission detection, was possible. The procedure was shown to be selective and sensitive with a limit of detection of 6.1 ìg/kg for methylmercury. The average recovery for the full procedure was 91 ± 19%. A preliminary survey of seafoods confirmed the previous observation that the proportion of methylmercury in the total mercury can vary widely, up to a complete occurrence as methylmercury.
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