Methodical peculiarities and practice of determining aluminum in blood and urine via mass spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma

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Toxicants produce adverse effects on population health thus causing health risks; assessment of such risks is a relevant trend in contemporary hygienic research. A list of toxic elements that are to be controlled in biological media includes, for example, mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, and aluminum (this element belongs to the 2nd hazard category). Aluminum is one of those elements which are the most widely spread in nature and it most frequently occurs in emissions from aluminum, mining, varnish and paint, and other productions. We developed a procedure for determining mass concentrations of aluminum in blood and urine via mass spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma (ICP-MS) (FR.1.31.2017.27357); the procedure allows determining aluminum contents in blood within a range from 20 to 200 µg/l with 31% precision; within 200-700 µg/l, with 23% precision; in urine, within a range from 0.1 to 10 µg/l, with 30% precision; within 10-1,000 µg/l, with 23% precision...

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Aluminum, blood, urine, children, adults, mass spectrometry with inductively coupled plasma (icp-ms), reference concentrations, octopole reaction system (ors), internal standard

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/142223302

IDR: 142223302   |   DOI: 10.21668/health.risk/2019.4.18

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