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      Application of Hyphenated Techniques in Speciation Analysis of Arsenic, Antimony, and Thallium

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          Abstract

          Due to the fact that metals and metalloids have a strong impact on the environment, the methods of their determination and speciation have received special attention in recent years. Arsenic, antimony, and thallium are important examples of such toxic elements. Their speciation is especially important in the environmental and biomedical fields because of their toxicity, bioavailability, and reactivity. Recently, speciation analytics has been playing a unique role in the studies of biogeochemical cycles of chemical compounds, determination of toxicity and ecotoxicity of selected elements, quality control of food products, control of medicines and pharmaceutical products, technological process control, research on the impact of technological installation on the environment, examination of occupational exposure, and clinical analysis. Conventional methods are usually labor intensive, time consuming, and susceptible to interferences. The hyphenated techniques, in which separation method is coupled with multidimensional detectors, have become useful alternatives. The main advantages of those techniques consist in extremely low detection and quantification limits, insignificant interference, influence as well as high precision and repeatability of the determinations. In view of their importance, the present work overviews and discusses different hyphenated techniques used for arsenic, antimony, and thallium species analysis, in different clinical, environmental and food matrices.

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          Most cited references211

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          Arsenic and antimony: comparative approach on mechanistic toxicology.

          T Gebel (1997)
          A chemico-toxicological similarity between arsenic and antimony exists and their toxicology is often seen. Indeed, both elements possess several common properties, e.g. they are clastogenic but not mutagenic in the trivalent state and they have a carcinogenic potential: trivalent arsenicals are known to be human carcinogens and antimony(III) oxide (by inhalation) has been shown to cause lung cancer in female rats. For years, arsenic has been known to be environmentally toxic. Elevated human exposure to this element, mostly caused by the intake of contaminated tap water, is associated with increased incidences of cancer at various sites. It is still not clear how arsenic compounds exert their genotoxic effect. It may be connected with an inhibition of DNA repair or the induction of oxidative stress. Little work has been done on the toxicology of antimony as it is less widely present in the environment. There is evidence that in mammals antimony, unlike arsenic, is not detoxified via methylation but it still remains unclear what mechanism is responsible for antimony's genotoxicity. In general, there is little information known about this element to accurately determine its impact on human health. Thus, the aim of this paper is to review current knowledge for future risk assessment and further scientific work.
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            Determination of arsenic speciation in poultry wastes by IC-ICP-MS.

            The aromatic organoarsenic compounds 4-hydroxy 3-nitrobenzenearsenic acid (Roxarsone, ROX) or 4-aminoben-zenearsenic acid (p-arsanilic acid, p-ASA) are used as feed additives in the poultry industry for disease control and enhanced feed efficiency. While federal regulations govern acceptable As concentrations in edible tissue, elevated As concentrations occur in poultry litter, which raises concerns over repeated land application of poultry litter in agriculture. As a precursor to studying the fate of these organoarsenic compounds in soils, three speciation methodologies were developed to separate ROX and p-ASA from the more common and more toxic As species arsenate, arsenite, dimethyl arsenic acid (DMA), and monomethyl arsenic acid (MMA). The six arsenic species were separated on a Dionex AS14 column using a PO4 eluant, an AS16 column using a OH- eluant, and an AS7 column using a HNO3 eluant. While all three methods provided detection limits below 0.5 microg L(-1) for all species, detection limits were lowest for the AS16 and AS7 columns, where all detection limits were generally < 0.05 microg L(-1). The major arsenic species in a water extract of a poultry litter sample was identified as ROX by all three methods with trace concentrations of DMA and As(V) also detected. The AS14 and AS16 separations also revealed a number of unidentified As species present at low concentrations, presumably metabolites of ROX. This methodology should prove useful in identifying organoarsenic compounds and the more toxic inorganic species in soils subject to poultry litter application.
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              Arsenic and its speciation analysis using high-performance liquid chromatography and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.

              It is known that arsenic has different toxicological properties dependent upon both its oxidation state for inorganic compounds, as well as the different toxicity levels exhibited for organic arsenic compounds. The field of arsenic speciation analysis has grown rapidly in recent years, especially with the utilization of high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), a highly sensitive and robust detector system. Complete characterization of arsenic compounds is necessary to understand intake, accumulation, transport, storage, detoxification and activation of this element in the natural environment and living systems. This review describes the essential background and toxicity of arsenic in the environment, and more importantly, some currently used chromatographic applications and sample handling procedures necessary to accurately detect and quantify arsenic in its various chemical forms. Applications and work using only HPLC-ICP-MS for arsenic speciation of environmental and biological samples are presented in this review.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ScientificWorldJournal
                ScientificWorldJournal
                TSWJ
                The Scientific World Journal
                The Scientific World Journal
                1537-744X
                2012
                2 May 2012
                : 2012
                : 902464
                Affiliations
                Institute of Environmental Engineering, the Polish Academy of Sciences, 34 Skłodowskiej-Curie Street, 41 819 Zabrze, Poland
                Author notes

                Academic Editors: I. Garrard and A. Hirabayashi

                Article
                10.1100/2012/902464
                3354673
                22654649
                8210ecf1-88c8-4431-a5d5-0d47a54c8c4f
                Copyright © 2012 Rajmund Michalski et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 31 October 2011
                : 21 December 2011
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