pubmed-article:9076609 | pubmed:abstractText | Dietary uptake may be a significant pathway of exposure to contaminants. As such, dietary exposure assessments should be considered an important part of the total exposure assessment process. The objective of this work was to develop reliable methods that are applicable to a wide range of base/neutral and carbamate-type pesticides in duplicate diet samples collected as part of dietary exposure assessment studies. The resulting method needed to be sensitive to concentrations below 1 ng/g, accurate and precise, and as simple and cost effective as possible. As a first step, information was gathered on current methods for measuring pesticides in foods. Although the literature methods could serve as a starting point, few had been applied to duplicate diet samples and detection limits were generally high (10 to 100 ng/g). Experimental work was performed to evaluate individual extraction, cleanup, and analysis procedures; link the most promising procedures into analysis methods; and generate performance data on the final method. The final method used Soxhlet extraction with solvent partitioning and gel permeation chromatography cleanup. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry was used for the analysis of base/neutral pesticides. High performance liquid chromatography analysis was used for the analysis of carbamate pesticides. Results of performance testing showed good accuracy (recovery > 70%), precision (% RSD < 25%), and sensitivity (method detection limits < 1.0 ng/g) for most pesticides targeted for study. | lld:pubmed |