Rapid determination of scopolamine in evidence of recreational and predatory use |
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Authors: | Jorge Sáiz Thanh Duc Mai María López López Carmen Bartolomé Peter C. Hauser Carmen García-Ruiz |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemistry I, Multipurpose Building of Chemistry, University of Alcalá, Ctra. Madrid–Barcelona km 33.600, 28871 Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain;2. University Institute of Research in Police Sciences (IUICP), University of Alcalá, Ctra. Madrid–Barcelona km 33.600, 28871 Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain;3. University of Basel, Department of Chemistry, Spitalstrasse 51, 4056 Basel, Switzerland;4. Centre for Environmental Technology and Sustainable Development (CETASD), Hanoi University of Science, Nguyen Trai Street 334, Hanoi, Viet Nam;5. Department of Life Sciences, University of Alcalá, Ctra. Madrid–Barcelona km 33.600, 28871 Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain |
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Abstract: | In recent years, scopolamine has become a drug of common use for recreational and predatory purposes and several ways of administration have been devised. A method for the rapid analysis of suspicious samples was developed, using a portable capillary electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detection. The method allows the separation of scopolamine from atropine which has a similar structure and is present along with scopolamine in some samples. The method was demonstrated to be useful for the fast analysis of several types of evidential items which have recently been reported to have been abused with fatal consequences or employed for criminal purposes. An infusion of Datura stramonium L., in which scopolamine and atropine naturally coexist, was analyzed for being frequently consumed for recreational purposes. A spiked moisturizing cream and six spiked alcoholic beverages were also analyzed. In spite of the complexity of the specimens, the sample pre-treatment methods developed were simple and fast. |
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