Food Hygiene and Safety Science (Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi)
Online ISSN : 1882-1006
Print ISSN : 0015-6426
ISSN-L : 0015-6426
Volume 56, Issue 6
Displaying 1-5 of 5 articles from this issue
Original Papers
  • Tomiaki MINATANI, Hiroyuki NAGAI, Hiroyuki TADA, Kotaro GOTO, Satoru N ...
    Article type: Original Paper
    2015 Volume 56 Issue 6 Pages 233-239
    Published: December 25, 2015
    Released on J-STAGE: December 23, 2015
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    An analytical method for the determination of butroxydim in agricultural products by LC-MS was developed. Butroxydim was extracted with acetonitrile and an aliquot of the crude extract was cleaned up on an octadecyl silanized silica gel (C18) cartridge column (1,000 mg), followed by a salting-out step to remove water. Before purification on a silica gel (SI) cartridge column (690 mg), polar matrices were precipitated by adding ethyl acetate, n-hexane and anhydrous sodium sulfate successively. This process effectively removed caffeine and catechins and improved recovery when analyzing residual butroxydim in tea leaves. Recovery and repeatability were good; the relative standard deviations were less than 5% for all 12 tested agricultural products (brown rice, soybean, potato, spinach, cabbage, apple, orange, grapefruit, lemon, tomato, peas with pods, and tea). Average recoveries for 11 agricultural products, except for lemon, were 74–92%.
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  • Tomomi YAMASAKI, Tomomi INOUE, Yuki HIRAKAWA, Shiro MIYAKE, Eiji UENO, ...
    Article type: Original Paper
    2015 Volume 56 Issue 6 Pages 240-246
    Published: December 25, 2015
    Released on J-STAGE: December 23, 2015
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Supplementary material
    Five kinds of commercially available ELISA kits (acetamiprid, azoxystrobin, chlorothalonil, fenitrothion and imidacloprid) were validated for determination of pesticide residues in vegetables and fruits. The reaction characteristics were also examined to evaluate their influence on the determinations. The trueness value was 91–162%, the repeatability was 2.1–16.2%, and the reproducibility was 4.0–20.3%. The desired values were achieved for 18 among 30 combinations (60%) of the ELISA kits and the agricultural products examined. A standard curve was necessary for each of the ELISA examinations. The matrix of the agricultural products and pipetting skill of the lab technician both influenced the measurment results.
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